v ■ Harpdr Library1 61 Archives Univ. of Chgo* Non - Profit Orf •. s. POSTAGEPAIDuIllinoisi Chicago'MM I feii°itBo-79 >Maroon Foundedn 1892VOL. 76, NO. 49 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1968 12 PAGES■ ».** k'AMAROONBOWLOne of the highlights of to¬day's contest between TheChicago Maroon and the TVCollege Bowl team will bea five-minute scenario ofThe Maroon Office andStaff shown during half¬time, stills of which areshown here. The time hasbeen changed to 3:30 p.m.in the Quantrell Auditoriumin Cobb Hall. SPAC BigIn SG ElectionsinnerThe Maroon—DAVID TRAVISStudent Group DislikesBlack Recruitment PlanThe Ad Hoc Committee for aResponsible University has issueda strong statement attacking newUniversity programs to attractblack students as inadequate. Thewhite student group is circulatinga petition demanding that Chicagoinstitute a 20-per cent quota on Ne¬gro students.“A quota system is the singlemost effective method to stimulateblack high school students to con¬tact us rather than depending onour small admissions staff to con¬tact them,” the statement said.“If letters were sent to theguidance counsellors of predomi¬nately Negro high school a n-nounced a projected increase inblack enrollment here from 2.8%to 20%, many more Negro highschool counselors would be madeaware than are at present that theUniversity of Chicago actively de¬sires black students and will f i-nance their education if neces¬sary.”According to Tim Rowton, aleader of the ad hoc group, 50 per¬cent of the College will havethe petition by a week from today.“These are good demands, andmost people seem to be quite u,.»tight about them,” he stated.AmateursRowton conceded, however, thatmost members o f groups were“amateurs” at political activity and that they had “made somemistakes.” He indicated that theorganization’s relations with theBlack Student Alliance had be¬come some what strained, al¬though there was still some coop¬eration with the two groups.According to Rowton, the BlackStudents Alliance takes the positionthat attracting Negro students tothe University is a white problem.It has therefore not participated inthe petition drive.Responding to the Ad Hoc Com¬mittee’s demands, Dean of Stu¬dents Charles O’Connell expressedhis personal opposition to a quotasystem. “This does not mean I amagainst doubling, tripling, or quad¬rupling serious efforts to attractmore black students to theCollege,” O’Connell stated.“The real measure by which tojudge our success in this case isnot the number of black studentswho come but the proportion ofthat number who graduate.”O’Connell also announced thatten undergraduate students will beneeded to work with South Sidehigh school students in the specialsummer training program an¬nounced as part of the University’snew program to attract black stu¬dents. Students will receive $600for eight weeks of work, and thoseinterested should contact Ext. 3741. By JOHN RECHTEditorial AssistantThe Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC) will control theStudent Government (SG) Assem¬bly again in the 1968-69 academicyear.Twenty - three SPAC-sup¬ported candidates won seats Fri¬day in the 49-member Assembly.SPAC Chairman Jerry, Lipsch, ’69,also the current SG vice-president,had the highest vote total, 182.In the National Student Associa¬tion (NSA) elections, John Mos¬cow, ’69, led all candidates with517 votes. The NSA Reform Party(NSARP) took six out of ten dele¬gate and alternate positions.The single referendum, to pro¬vide in the Student Bill of Rightsthat students who are drafted orin any manner, legal or illegal,avoid military service will be auto¬matically readmitted, passed bybetter than a five-to-one margin.1360 students voted in support ofthe referendum, and 247 votedagainst.About one-third of the Collegeand five per cent of graduate andprofessional school students voted.The results of the SG electionsare as follows (^denotes winner,? denotes tie; all ties are brokenby Assembly vote):Burton-JudsonOne seat — Scott Bennett (In¬dependent) 79*.Pierce-BoucherTwo seats — Alan Lahn (Ind.)Carl Sunshine (Ind.) 49, Leo Mol-daver (Ind.) 45, A1 Shpuntoff(Ind.) 43, and Jim Roy (Ind.) 40.Snell-HitchcockOne seat — Steve Landsman(Ind.) 39* and Robert W. Stuller(Ind.) 1.6Woodward-University HouseThree seats — Chelsea Baylor94*, Nancy Wieckowicz (Ind.) 74,and Neil Caiman (Ind.) 67.FraternitiesOne seat — Paul Barron (Ind.)36*, Bruce Caswell (Ind.) 19, andTed Peterson (Ind.) 16.Other CollegeSeven seats — Jerry Lipsch(SPAC) 182*, Tobey Klass (SPAC)Arthur Hochberg (SPAC) 130*,Michael Krauss (SPAC) 124*,Richard Speiglman (SPAC) 124*,Spurr (SPAC) 89, Jonathan Still(Ind.) 85, Ray Boguslav (Ind.) 62,Peter L. Ratner (Ind.) 53, JeraldKessler (Ind.) 52, Steve Weston(Ind. 50, Margaret Woehrle (Ind.)38 ,and Sheldon Sacks (Ind.) 37.BiologyTwo seats — Joseph Rothberg(write-in) 4*, Paul Cull (w-i) 2?,and Jane Peterson (w-i) 2?.BusinessThree seats — Roger Allen (w-i)2*, Michael McCaskey (w-i) 1?,Vincent Kaval ‘(w-i) 1?, Jeff Met¬calf (w-i) 1?, T. Harvey WigderDennis Hickey (w-i) 1, Ed Ep- trick (w-i) 1?, Rick Gusanger(w-i) 1?, Willie Davis (w-i) 1?,Elmer Merkel (w-i) 1?, Bill Huf-ford (w-i), Robert Kaiser (w-i) 1,Moon (w-i) 1?, C. Raymond Clark(w-i) 1?, Leonard Kenney (w-i)Kraus (w-i) 1?, Robert Lakin(w-i) 1, and Bob Tyson (w-i) 1?.DivinityTwo seats — Loel A. Callahan (Ind.) 18* and David F. Kohl, Jr.(Ind.) 15*.EducationOne seat — Linnea Weiland(SPAC) 8*.HumanitiesFive Seats — Bruce Kaplan(w-i) 1?, Simon Anderson (w-i)1?, Roberta G. Berry (w-i) 1?,Turn to Page 3Primack AnnouncesPeace March PlansBy DAVID L. AIKENStaff WriterA second march will be heldSaturday to protest police violenceat last Saturday’s peace parade.Maxwell Primack, co-chairmanof the Chicago Peace Council anda professor of philosophy at Illi¬nois Institute of Technology, an¬nounced at a press conferenceits supporting groups have organ-Wednesday that the Council andized the march, to start at 11 a.m.versity of Illinois Chicago Jirclefrom the amphitheatre on the Unicampus.Demonstrators will proceed tothe Civic Center plaza, wherespeeches are scheduled.Les Coleman, a member of thesteering committee of the April 27parade committee and a staffworker for Students for a Demo¬cratic Society, said, “We hope wewill be allowed to march and rallypeacefully.”‘Tightening Grip’Coleman said the police actionin clubbing and beating demon¬strators while clearing the plaza“represents the tightening grip oaChicagoans’ basic human right toprotest around any grievance forwhich they cannot otherwise findjust response.”Primack also charged, “We arefirmly convinced that the daywould have passed without inci¬dent had it not been for the pro¬vocative presence and demeanorof the Chicago Police Depart¬ment.”The primary purpose of tomor¬row’s march, according to Cole¬man and Primack, will be to de¬mand “an end to restriction onfreedom of speech and assemblyin Chicago.”It will also demand “an end topolice repression against the anti¬war movement, black strugglesand against all poor and workingpeople,” Coleman said.ACLU AnnouncementThe American Civil LibertiesUnion has announced support ofthe march’s purpose of demand¬ing First Amendment rights ofspeech and assembly. Those arrested in last Saturday’smelee had court appearancesWednesday, but most cases werecontinued until June 17 to 26.Judge Maurice W. Lee, whoheard most of the cases early inthe day, ordered his court roomcleared of all spectators exceptdefendants when laughter brokeout following a bailiff’s chargethat he had found Irving Birn-baum, a noted civil liberties law¬yer who was defending severaldemonstrators, “soliciting with ayoung girl” in the halls outside thecourt room.Lawyers ConsultedMany defendants had beenforced to hurriedly consult lawyersin corridors when Lee refused toallow them court-appointed law¬yers, according to Marilyn Katzof the National Mobilization Com¬mittee, who is co-ordinating dem¬onstrators’ defenses.“They treated people inhumanlyin the courtroom,” said Bimbaum.Defendants are depending most¬ly on private lawyers, Miss Katzsaid, since the ACLU has decidedto stay out of individual defend¬ants’ cases, involving itself in achallenge to the disorderly conductstatute under which most defend¬ants were charged.Birnbaum noted, however, that“significant number of lawyerswere incensed enough by the vio¬lence” to volunteer for defensework.Two defendants had their casescompleted Wednesday. Bothpleaded guilty, and were givenfines of $100 each and a year onprobation.ELECTIONSThe Chicago Maroon elec¬tions have been postponedfrom 4 to 4:30 p.m. due tothe rescheduling of the Ma¬roon Bowl to 3:30 p.m. Allstaff members are asked toattend the elections,COPS MOVE INSfudenfs Demand Kirk LeaveRALLY ROUND THE FLAGhoisted a red book bag and then an upside-down stars and stripesnoisted a red book bag and then an upside-down stars andstripeson the Administration Building flag pole before their May 1 ritualwas ended by a burly campus policeman.Hershey Warns against TA DefermentsSpecial to The MaroonNEW YORK—Columbia Univer¬sity’ returned to outward calm yes¬terday after a week of campusrevolt.A student strike called to pro¬test the police action which Presi¬dent Grayson Kirk ordered to clearcampus buildings became quicklyirrelevant when the Universitycancelled all classes for the rest ofthe week, and campus observerspredicted that the University wouldprobably return to its normalschedule after the weekend.Meanwhile, pressure was build¬ing among faculty members forthe removal of Kirk. At a facultymeeting Tuesday a resolution call¬ing for support for the studentstrike until Kirk resigned nearlywon approval and was only with¬drawn when it became clear thatit would not pass by acclamation.Kirk has announced categoricallythat he does not intend to resign.Observers tho watched policeclear the campus buildings earlyTuesday morning reported wide¬spread incidents of violence. At5 p.m. on Monday after an abor¬tive attempt to arrange for MayorLindsay to mediate the dispute,Kirk decided to bring the policeonto campus. With the assistanceof professional mediator TheodoreKheel arrangements were made toarrest the black students peace¬fully. When they had beenarrested, police moved to the whiteheld buildings.Plainclothesmen moved in withclubs and bullhorns. There werereports of girls being dragged on¬to the sidewalk by their hair, kick¬ing and being beaten.SDS Students HereCall Support RallyStudents for a Democratic Soci¬ety at Chicago has called a rallyin support of the Columbia striketoday. The rally will gather in theHutchinson Quadrangle at 12:30p.m., according to Christopher Z.Hobson, a graduate students in po¬litical science.Roosevelt StudentsPlan Monday ProtestStudents and faculty at RooseveltUniversity are scheduled Mondayto picket, sit in, and otherwise pro-f pizza| PLATTER ;/. (Cy Pizza, Fried Chicken,,j^ Italian FoodsCompare the Price!| 1460 E. 53rd Street |> Ml 3-2800 kCINIMA"UVB FOR LIFE"Chicago Ave. at MichiganThe New Love StoryBy Claude LeLouchDirector of “Man & a Woman”Golden Globe AwardAcademy award NomineeYves Montand-Candice BergenIn ColorStudents $1.50with I.D. CardGood every day but SaturdayWeekdays open 6pm. Sat. & Sun. 1:30 test the action of Roosevelt Presi¬dent Rolf A. Weil, who recently ve¬toes the appointment of StaughtonLynd, outspoken political activist,to the History Department there.Lynd’s appoinment to a full-timeposition had been unanimouslyrecommended by Roosevelt’s his¬tory department when Weil vetoedit for reasons which he claims are“ad hominum” rather than politi¬cal. Weil declined to make thosead hominum reasons public.Students at Roosevelt have sincesubmitted two petitions in protestto Weil. The faculty has presentedWeil with a petition signed by 85members protesting the veto.Lynd, who previously accusedChicago State College and the Uni¬versity of Chicago of denying himpositions for political reasons, hasnot yet taken any direct actionagainst Roosevelt. He told theRoosevelt student newspaper, TheTorch, that he would not sign anypetitions yet, but that he would par¬ticipate in protests there Monday.Committee OK's BillTo Extend AidWASHINGTON (CPS) - TheHouse Education and Labor Com¬mittee has approved a bill extend¬ing the Federal Government’s ma¬jor students financial aid programsfor two years.President Johnson had recom¬mended that the various studentair programs be extended for fiveyears. The Committee also r e-jected a recommendation that all the programs be combined undera single act—the Education Oppor¬tunity Act of 1968.The committee’s proposal thatthe program be extended for onlytwo years indicates some dissatis¬faction with t h e government’soverall effort in financial aid tostudents. There have been num¬erous recent recommendationsabout how the government shouldmodify and increase its studentaid programs.The proposed two-year extensionpresumably is designed to g i v eCongress the opportunity to reviewthe various recommendations, andpossibly make major changes inthe programs in two rather thanfive years.The committee’s approved billinvolved guaranteed student loanprogram, National Defense Educa¬tion Act loans, Education Opportu¬nity Grants, and the college work-study program. The programs willexpire June 30 without new Con¬gressional authority. If the bill isapproved by Congress, the com¬bined authorization for all theseprograms will be about $1 billion.However, Congress usually appro¬priates less than the amount au¬thorized for such programs.The bill, which was drafted bythe House Special Subcommitteeon Education headed by Rep.Edith Green (D-Ore.) does notmake radical changes in any ofthe aid programs. WASHINGTON (CPS) - Selec¬tive Service Director Lewis B.Hershey has told local draftboards not to consider graduateteaching assistants for occupation¬al deferments. In a short memorandum sent tolocal boards, Hershey said: “A fulltime graduate student shall not beconsidered for occupational defer¬ments because he is engaged inteaching part-time.”! JLiUUUUUULIUUUUULSU^ LSJJLFor The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All 1968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715LAST WEEKENDIN INDIANAMcCarthy Needs YouCall Students for a Political AlternativeExt. 3579Buses and cars availableLeave Ida Noyes Friday night 7 pmand Saturday morning 8:15 return Sunday eveningCars leaving daily for Gary and points south* ^ rj GEORGE WHIN Presents the 15th AnnualNEWPORT rSSTITIL :July 4 thru July 7, 1968at Festival Field • Newport, Rhode IslandTour Lieu ini; Concerts — Thursday: Count Basie, Barney Kessel, Jim[V Hall, Nina Simone, Gary Burton, Mongo Santamaria, Cannonball ■A cilleries', and others; Friday: “Schlitz Salute to Big Bands" — DukeEllington, Count Basie, Wood) Herman, Dizzy Gillespie ReunionBand and guest artists; Saturday: Dionne Warwick, Duke Ellington,Alex Welsh, Ruby Braff, Pee Wee Russell, Joe Venuti, Bud Freeman,Hugh Masekcla; Sunday: Wes Montgomery, Horace Silver, RamseyLewis. Roland Kirk, Vi Redd, Don Ellis, Flip Wilson and others.Three Afternoon Concerts — Friday. Freddie Hubbard, LuckyThompson, Dizzy Gillespie, Flvin Jones, Archie Shepp and others;Saturday: Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges, Benny Carter, Montego'Joe, Ta! Earlow, Sonny Criss; Sunday: An Afternoon with Ray Charles.'Evening and Sunday Afternoon tickets: $3.50, 4.50, 5.50(Box Seats: $10.00)Friday and Saturday Afternoon — General Admission: $3.00THE NEWPORT FOLK FOUNDATION Presents theNEWPORT FOLK FESTIVALJuly 23 thru July 28Four major evening concerts .Thursday through Sunday, afternoonevents, Children's Day, Square Dancing, and other special events.Roy Aculf, Then Bikel, Bread & Puppet Theatre, Judy Collins,Elizabeth Cotton, Arlo Guthrie, George Hamilton IV, John Hartford,Richie Havens, B. B. King, Jim Kweskin, Penny Whistlers, JeanRitchie, Pete Seeger, Ken Threadgill, Doc Watson and many others.; Evening Tickets: Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun.: $3.50, 4 50, 5.50(Box Seats: $10.00)Tues., Wed. Eves. & Afternoon Events: $2.00 General Admission— Group Rates Available —• All Programs Subject to ChangeFor Information and Tickets regarding all Newport Festivals,Write . . . Newport Festivals, P.O. Box 329Newport, Rhode Island 02K402 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 3, 1968Student Government. NSA Election Results InContinued from Page 1Robert I. Binnick (w-i) 1?, JohnAndrew Druska (w-i) 1?, GeorgiaGreen (w-i) 1?, Joe Lubenow (w-i)1?, Dean Kenneth Niles (w-i), 1,Richard Pollack (w-i) 1?, PeterRabinowitz (w-i) 1?, John Stev- ens (w-i) 1?, and Peter Travis Library(w-i), 1. One seat — Howard PasternackLawThree seats — Jonathan Dean (w-i) 6*.(Law Students Liberation Front Medical54*, Jane Levine (LSLF) 50*, Two seats — Kenneth Bridbordand Richard McMillan (LSLF) (Ind.) 11* and John Vogel (Ind.)44*. 10*. Physical SciencesFour seats — Paul Evanson(Ind.) 23*, Hugh Wilson (SPAC)Stuart Newman (SPAC) 20*, andJoel Schwartz (SPAC) 16.Social SciencesNine seats — Chris HobsonSenate Hears Plans for Funding of Private GroupsWASHINGTON (CPS) - A Sen¬ate subommittee has begun hear¬ings on a proposed governmentfoundation which would providemoney to private groups for inter¬national programs formerly fundedby the Central Intelligence Agency.At the same time, a commit¬tee appointed last winter by Presi¬dent Johnson to propose new waysof funding such projects will makeits report “in the near future,” ac¬cording to its executive director. The foundation created by theSenate bill would be funded by Fed¬eral appropriations and privategifts. It would be governed by adirector and 11-member councilselected from persons “eminent inthe fields of education, student ac¬tivities, youth activities, labor,health, scientific research” and oth¬er fields to which the foundationwould give funds.The bill, introduced by Sen.Ralph Yarborough (D-Tex.), chair-Abernathy Asks Students HelpWASHINGTON. (CPS) - Dr.Martin Luther King’s successor ashead of the Southern ChristianLeadership Conference has issued acall for students to join in the PoorPeople’s Campaign.Student at ChicagoKilled in VietnamCharles Bonghartz, 70, waskilled in action this week inVietnam.Bonghartz, a chemestry major,had volunteered for induction inthe Army during the early sum¬mer of last year. According toDean of Undergraduate StudentsMeyer Eisenberg, he had plannedto return to Chicago to receive hisB.S. degree upon completion of histerm of service.Bonghartz, from Balencia, Penn¬sylvania, had dropped out of schoolpreviously upon the death of hisparents. Although his defermentwas revoked when he failed to r-ceive a degree within four years,'it was reinstated upon appeal. Hsubsequently decided to volunteerfor service despite the reinstat-ment, however. Dr. Ralph Abernathy, in Wash¬ington with 100 leaders of the Cam¬paign to meet with Cabinet officersstudents would be especially need¬ed on May 27, when the build-upfor the major demonstrations willbegin.The full text of Abernathy’s state¬ment:“I urge all students who supportthis Poor People’s Campaign ofmilitant non-violent action to joinus in Washington as soon as stud¬ies and examinations permit. Weespecially need students startingMay 27, when we will be buildingup our demonstrations and pre¬paring for a great march on Wash¬ington May 30. man of the subcommittee holdingthe hearings, authorized expendi¬tures of up to $100 million by 1972.Yarborough’s bill closely resem¬bles one of the four possibilities be¬ing considered by a study commit¬tee appointed by President Johnsonand headed by secretary of stateDean Rusk committee. The othersare a similar foundation but withonly limited funds and responsibil¬ities, providing the funds throughthe State Department, and provid¬ing funds through the Agency forInternation Development.One of Yarborough’s staff mem¬bers, however, said the subcommit¬tee is not interested in the otherthree proposals. All of the witnes¬ses who testified opposed gettingthe money from the State Depart¬ment or AID or said those groupshad limited funds for such pro¬grams. Yarborough said, “We’retrying to cut out the bureaucracythat people have to go through insome of these other organizations*:EtF EXAMINATIONSEASHION EVE//EARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimberk PUza»200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372^ fpreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313i ( 1 * t ; i The bill specifically prohibits thegovernment from requiring grantrecipients to engage in intelligencework, as was done when the CIAfunded programs. And the bill pro¬hibits the President and other exec¬utive agencies from controlling de¬cisions on grants made by thecouncil. However, the bill does re¬quire the foundation’s director toreport to both the President andCongress. (SPAC) 32*, Bill Komrich (SPAC)Mike Goldfield (SPAC 28*, MaryNelson (SPAC) 28*, Dan Candee(SPAC) 26*.Social Service AdministrationTwo seats — Frank Handelman(w-i) 1* and Roberta Rettig (w-i)1*.The results in the NSA ballotingare: John Moscow (NSARP) 517*,Alan Bloom (Ind.) 482*, Bill Phil¬lips (NSARP) 405*, Roger Black(NSARP) 371*, John Siefert(NSARP) 357*, Chelsea Baylor(Ind.) 345*, Bemie Grofman(NSARP) 307*, Nancy Wieckowicz(Ind.) 296*, M. Dov Dublin (Ind.)286*, Jonathan Still (NSARP 256,Leonard Zax (NSARP) 222, JohnDuslack (Ind.) 201, Joe Cobb(NSARP) 179, and Jim McDaniel(NSARP) 159.The top five NSA candidates willbe the delegates and the next fivethe alternates at the summer NSAcongress.SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53 rdC^orne ft DLiu mmM 1645 E. 55* STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 60615Phone: FA 4-1651rnone: t A 4-1651, , guw. $ w. w. w. w. w w. w. s™ Adi tori alJohn’s Mens Store is now offering studentsall of their wardrobe needs to fit all pocket booksWe have specials such as these:crewneck 8c turtlenecks $1.98little boys suits $5.00sportcoats $12.98sweaters $6.98sta-press pants $5.98We have much more for much lessJohn’s Mens Shop1459 East 53rd StreetFREE EVENING BUS SERVICEFORSTUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFFThe U of C Woodlawn JitneyA new Bus Service which is free to all Students, Faculty and Staffupon presentation of their identification cards has begun.The new Bus, called the 4,U of C Woodlawn Jitney" operates con¬tinuously from 6 P.M. to Midnight daily, Monday through Friday untilthe end of the Spring Quarter.The route runs continuously on Woodlawn Avenue between 60thStreet and 49th Street on an approximate 15 minute schedule.THE "C" COMBINED EVENING ROUTEAn additional bus has been added to the “C" Route, the rout«shown on the Campus Bus Route maps, and the schedule has been ex¬tended from 6 P.M. to 12:15 A.M. on a 15 minute basis until the endof the Spring Quarter. The route has been altered slightly to includea stop at 5400 Greenwood.This service is also free to Students, Faculty and Staff upon pre¬sentation of their identification cards.NOTE that Evening Buses areidentifiable by flashing lights.BUSES WILL STOP UPON YOUR SIGNALANYWHERE ALONG THE ROUTES.Office! Office of the Business ManagerCampus Operationsjot rW jsd .mqo nnc;o j“- I N ■P I I I Urwftay M968 £ 3APRIL 27 MARCH100.000 in N.Y. Join in National ProtestBy College Press ServiceAccording to latest information,several hundred thousand peoplein 17 cities demonstrated againstthe war in Vietnam April 27.The largest demonstration wasin New York City, where about100,000 participated in the demon¬stration. The New York Timescounted 87,000 marchers, but therewere several thousand more whodid not march but went directly tothe Central Park rally site.There were actually fourmarches in New York. The twomajor parades went down eitherside of Central Park and con¬verged in Sheep Meadow for a ral¬ly at which they heard Mrs. Mar¬tin Luther King, New York MayorJohn Lindsay, the Rev. WilliamSloane Coffin, and 16 other speak¬ers.A third march, involving about400 people, most of them fromYouth Against War and Facism,planned to march from Washing¬ton Square to Columbus Circle.They had quit the main demon¬stration because of the invitationextended to Lindsay and intendedto march without a parade permit.After they had gathered inWashington Square, they were at¬tacked by police, many of whomwere dressed as marchers, and143 were arrested. The policedragged many of the demonstra¬tors to the ground, beat some ofthem, and attempted to keep pho¬tographers from taking pictures,observers said. The fourth parade was the 20thannual “loyalty day” parade,which drew 6600 people, the smal¬lest crowd in its history. The par¬ade was in support of Americantroops in Vietnam.The two anti-war marches downFifth Ave. and Central Park Westwere led by returned veterans anddraft resisters respectively. Highschool students were the largestgroup in both parades.Bottles and EggsAs the Fifth Ave. marchersturned into Central Park at 72ndSt. singing “America the Beauti¬ful,” they were pelted with bottlesand eggs by about 50 pro-war dem¬onstrators, carrying Americanflags and yelling “Communists.”About half way into the park thepro-war group attacked the draftresisters leading the march andtore down their banner, whichread “End the war madness now.”They then tore down tables set upby the Socialist Workers Partyand chanted “hey, hey, what doyou say, let’s support the U.S.A.”and “war now.” Then several ofthem grabbed a National Libera¬tion Front flag from one of theanti-war demonstrators andburned it. The police finally broke up the pro-war activity withthreats of jail.Mayor Lindsay, who had spokento the loyalty day marchers ear¬lier, greeted the marchers andtold them he had come there “torestate my opposition to the con¬duct of the war.”1-Million EstimatedIn Student StrikeNEW YORK (CPS)—Based onearly returns from about one-fourthof the participating schools orga¬nizers of the April 26 InternationalStudent Strike estimated that morethan one million students partici¬pated in the strike.On Saturday, with reports from282 U. S. campuses in, 382,000 stu¬dents had participated in the strike.About 1,000 schools were expectedto participate. If they did and theykept up the average of 1,200 perschool, student participation wouldtotal 1,200,000 students.High school students played amajor role in the strike. In NewYork City, where about half thestriking schools were located, 225,000 high school students—about 72per cent of New York’s 300,000—stayed away from classes. 111:3101111:11Tilt: I>1 POUT ami: oi m iNf.TAIINUKTVisconti’s SENSOBy the director of THE STRANGER; an Italian masterpiece. Tonight. 7:15 and 9:30 in Cobb. $1. Doc Eilms.FESTIVAL OF RECREATIONAL ARTSIn celebration of the month of May, St. Andrews Day, the liberation of blithe spirits, the flores of Spring, tiptoeing through the tulips, Buster Crabbe,Rin Tin Tin, grass, a new student government, frogs of the intellect, screaming gargoyles, and smale foweles that slepen al the nyght with open ye:The Festival of Recreational Arts is pleased to announceextended hours for student and faculty use of recreational facilities,starting May 1st.Swimming — coedMonday — Ida Noyes, 8-10 P.M.Bartlett, 7-9 P.M.Tuesday — Ida Noyes, 8-10 P.M.Bartlett, 7-9 P.M.Wednesday — Ida Noyes, 7-10 P.M.Bartlett, 7-9 P.M.Thursday - Ida Noyes, 8-10 P.M.Bartlett, 7-9 P.M.Friday - Ida Noyes, 7-10 P.M.Saturday - Ida Noyes, 3-4 P.M., 7-10 P.M.Sunday - Ida Noyes, 3:30-4:30 P.M.; 7-10 P.M.Swimming — menMonday-Friday - Bartlett, 12:30-1 :30, 5-6 P.M.Boucher, 8:30 P.M.-10 P.M. (except Friday)Swimming — womenMonday, Tuesday, Thursday - Ida Noyes, 4:30-6 P.M. Bowling — coedNightly, Ida Noyes, 7-10 P.M. (two lanes, live pinsetters, free)Billiards and Table TennisMonday - Friday, Ida Noyes, 8 A.M. to midnight 9 A.M.* Reynolds Club, 10 A.M. to I I P.M.Saturday - Ida Noyes, I I A.M. to midnight•Reynolds Club, I P.M. to I I P.M.Sunday — Ida Noyes, 3:00 to midnight•Reynolds Club, 4 P.M. to I I P.M.•Billiards onlyMasticatory and Gustatory Exercizecontinue to be available:Monday-Friday C-Shop, 10-a.m. to 7 p.m.Gallery, 7 p.m. to I I p.m.Bandersnatch, 5:30 pm to 1:30 a m.Saturday C-shop, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Bandersnatch, 5:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.Sunday Bandersnatch, 5:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.THE CHICAGO MAROON May 3, 1968GADFLYIs a Judicial System What Chicago Really Needs?By JAMES VICEThe Committee on Undergrad¬uate Discipline has come in for acertain amount of attention re¬cently. Broadsides have de¬scribed — with a not-surprisingone-sidedness — both the sup¬posed particulars of a specificcase and the supposed proce¬dures of the Committee. The ap¬pointment by Charles 0.Con¬nell of a faculty committeeinvited to reflect upon disciplin¬ary practices has itself createdsome interest. Public discussion,hopefully, will benefit from thepresentation of further facts andpoints of view.The Committee, on which Ihave occasionally served as act¬ing chairman, is now made up offive faculty members (one fromeach of the Collegiate divisions)and is chaired by the Dean ofUndergraduate Students. Thechairman votes only rarely, incase of a tiei. Two student ob¬servers appointed by StudentGovernment may be present atthe request of the student who isappearingi before the Committee.The Assistant Dean of the Col¬lege has also been present dur¬ing the past year as an observerfor the Dean of the College. Theobservers participate in the dis¬cussion both with the student ap¬pearing before the Committeeand in the deliberations, but theydo not vote.THE COMMITTEE, in thehalf-dozen years of its existence,has talked with from 15 to 23 stu¬dents per year. There has beenno “upward trend’’ over theyears, and there is no evidencecurrently to lead us to think thefigure will be higher for thisyear.Appearing before the Com¬mittee is for most students a ser¬ious matter, and the prospect ofit produces a considerable dis¬location of the student’s studies.The Committee therefore meetswith the student as promptly aspossible (usually in a matter oftwo to four days, although oc¬casionally postponments haveseemed appropriate).THE COMMITTEE meeting be¬gins with the chairman reading areport on the matter to the stu¬dent and the members of theCommittee, although all havepreviously been informed of thecharges. The student is askedabout the accuracy of the state¬ment and is invited to commenton it. The Committee membersWINSTON CHURCHILLand 125 other life-like.life size wax figuresin 40 beautiful scenesKupl HottfcmtUax ffantm(016 ®mmt1419 No. Wells Phone 337-7786Group rates with guided toursOpen daily r.ecr. to midnight then talk with him about his con¬duct. The student may have anadvisor with him throughout, ifhe wishes, and may call uponother persons to speak in his be¬half. Occasionally, the CommitteeMembers will also speak withthe faculty member, director, ordean who first called the matterto the attention of the chairman.After the student withdrawsfrom the meeting, the Committeedeliberates on what it has heardand what to do about it. Oncethe Committee reaches a deci¬sion, the chairman so notifies thestudent and talks with him aboutthe significance of the Com¬mittee’s decision. The student isadvised that he may appeal thedecision to the dean of studentsin the University.THE COMMITTEE thus farthroughout its existence has seenitself as a committee of facultymembers selected to talk witha student about his conduct with¬in the college community. TheCommittee is to consider boththe well being of that communityand the particulars of the indi¬vidual student and his conduct.The Committee is of course ex¬pected to act reasonably and fairly. It has over the yearsworked out its own proceduresdesigned to promote fairness andgood judgment but has not seenitself as modeled on a court oflaw.The institutions and proceduresof the Anglo-American judiciaryare among the noblest productsof the human mind. Liberalshave an appropriate admirationfor them, and it is an understand¬able liberal prejudice to employthem analogically in thinkingabout a wide range of institution¬alized behavior. This happenswith regard to the DisciplineCommittee: proposals to improveits workings often suggest the in¬troduction of procedures fromthe criminal law. The currentbroadsides have done just that:in this respect, they are admir¬ably liberal rather than shocking¬ly radical. That does not insurethat such proposals are wise orappropriate, however.IT IS WORTH noting that theprocedures suggested typicallyare rather partial. No one hasever proposed, for example, thatstudents be “subpoenaed” toappear before the Committee to testify “under oath” about theconduct of other students.The more important and priorquestion, however, is whether thejudicial model is a wise one toemploy at all. The academiccommunity, in so far as it is aspecial kind of community, maywell benefit from special institu¬tions. Attachment to reason andjustice does not necessarily im¬ply that the University’s proced¬ures and institutions should sim¬ply mirror those of the largerpolitical community.THIS IS particularly ture inview of the purpose which mostsuch procedural devices have. Itis worthy of some note that therehave never been any extensiveallegations that the DisciplinaryCommittee has penalized a stu-den for something he had notdone. Yet procedural devicessuch as a “jury trial,” “pre¬sumption of innocence,” or “cross examination of witnesses”are all related to determinationof facts. It would appear fromthe record of criticism, past andpresent, that the Committee hasnever acted in notable error onthe facts. Perhaps this is becausethe officers who have referredmatters to the Committee, thechairman, and the Committee it¬self have acted in cases wherethere was no real doubt in themihds of anyone familiar withthe case, either student or fac¬ulty, whether the person haddone what was asserted.Mr. Vice is assistant dean ofundergraduate students.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856MONDAY LECTURES8 P.M. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMMay 6 Herbert FeiglMind and Its Place in NatureMay 13 Benson GinsburgGenes and Behavior--A New Look at an Old ProblemSERIES TICKET $10. U. of C. students and faculty mayrequest complimentary tickets at Center for ContinuingEducation, Room 121, or at Central Information Desk,Adm. Bldg.For Information, call Extension 3137.in that wild 'mixed-media, all-element, 1< ?-!♦»total environment called *DANCE. 00 YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANOS IN AMERICA® Rip out this ad now and bring it tom Cheetah this weekend for a: SPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGO: STUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.30 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND ATTICKET CENTRAL' 2 12 NORTH MICHIGANGROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50-2000WIDl OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M. Playtex* invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent.. .it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45 % more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero! m _ r ,c plfS1“ )ns :Why live in the past?«• ■numwww.wiApril 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerUrban CoalitionIn 1946 the University of Chicago began a massiveprogram to lobby and pressure government and othergroups to place nuclear arms under the control of thePresident rather than the military. Committees headedby faculty members were set up in Washington, D.C.and in other cities across the nation to promote whatis now known as the McMahon Act. At this time theUniversity felt a great obligation to society to takeand actively promote its stand.The University is now facing an explosive crisisconcerning the black community, and it can no longerremain aloof from the ghetto problem nor can it viewthe community as a research laboratory. While theUniversity has many programs which deal with theghetto problem, these programs are small compared tothe total problems besetting the black community.The University, -despite its own financial difficulties,must take a stand and promote strong measures.In order that these programs can be implementedthe University will have to pressure and lobby thegovernment and private business through the influenceof its faculty, students, alumni, and trustees. OtherUrban universities located near on in black ghettos— Columbia, Penn, Temple, Wayne State, IIT, andBrooklyn College, for example — are facing similarcrisis situations which call for immediate action. Anurban university coalition which would bring togethertheir influence, ideas, and facilities to pressure govern¬ment and business into ghetto, could do much to re¬lieve the pressure without drawing heavily on theuniversities’ already austere budgets.Chicago's Spring“April is the cruelest month,” the poet tells us,but this year’s cruel reincarnation seems heavily tingedwith death. The flowers are in full bloom in front ofthe Administration Building. The carefully manicuredgrass is as green as ever, and the lawn is dotted withlounging students soaking in the sunshine. Spring hascome — obeying its brutal schedule which ignores theemotions of mere academics. But somewhere amongthe spray of bullets in Vietnam and Woodlawn, theusual buoyancy that generally pervades this campus bythe middle of Spring Quarter has been punctured.April 1968 was the month when two gentle menwere killed — one in Memphis Tennessee, the otheron 56th street. It was the month of slow disillusion¬ment as eager millions waited for the peace talks thatnever came. It was the month when Chicago blew up,and the month when two mediocrities surged intocommanding leads in the presidential race.But most of all, April was the month of the long,agonizing wait. Graduating seniors began serving outtheir final months of freedom before Vietnam, jail, orCanada. City officials waited for the second explosionwhich will almost certainly come, and we all waitedfor the inevitable climax to the desperate crisis whichhas griped this country and this community.April was the month when another Chicago studentwas killed in action while serving in Vietnam. It wasthe month when seasonal potency and chronic im¬potence merged in weird confluence. It was a monththe likes of which we shall, hopefully, never have tolive.ti\OTgh noil-tub ylbobioeb ?.i rloiriw-r- ■. -—CHICAGO MAROON — tehl firtJ fciMay 371968 'This is fun, but tomorrow I reallyhave to study/V.JOHN MOSCOWThe Petition on Racism:Exercise in ImpracticalityIt is an unfortunate commen¬tary on the state of reason ver¬sus emotion these days that apetition asking for the impossibleand containing a large numberof misstatements of facts anddownright foolish statementsshould be winning a fair mea¬sure of acceptance on campus.The Petition for a ResponsibleUniversity is irresponsible in itsallegations and silly in its re¬quests to a far greater degreethan even the traditional.. studentirresponsibility can warrant.While normally it would deservenothing but contempt, it dealswith important issues and oughtto be contradicted immediately.STARTING with the housingsection, there is a demand thatthe University make enormous,almost unlimited, expendituresin the Woodlawn and Hyde Parkareas. These include a housingrenewal program which would besubsidized not only in its con¬struction, but in its maintainanceby the University, if the petitionis to be believed. It is not theplace of the University to at¬tempt such a project, even if theUniversity were financially cap¬able of doing so. The total of theUniversity’s assets would barelybegin the job of rebuilding Wood¬lawn, and already it has beenbadly hurt by its enormous ex¬penditures in Hyde Park. It can¬not afford the same in Woodlawn.To argue, as the petitioners havedone, that the University is richbecause its trustees come fromrich companies, .does not clarifyanything. It is merely to throwftuEedp^rring in, ther-gath, m apn .w v ;T5q<. rial: 1 r>, attempt to defeat logic withinanities.IN THE SAME section there isa demand that the Universitydeal with the people of Wood¬lawn, but not with The Wood¬lawn Organization. Now, thereare good grounds for not dealingwith TWO, including the fact thatthe Mayor would be happier withthe University if it ignored TWO.There do not seem to be anyother groups in Woodlawn thathave come forward claiming torepresent the community, how¬ever. It seems foolish to de¬nounce the only organization ina community as non-representa¬tive, presumably because itsanswers are not those of the de¬nouncers.The fourth point in the housingsection is the least creditable.Not only does it refer to the pre¬viously stated demands that theUniversity construct subsidizedhousing for non-University peo¬ple, but it makes reference to anon-existent Student Union whichis not even being planned.The next section concerns en¬rollment, and is truly appallingin its unconscious parody of theIvy League President, whothrough the 1940’s defended aquota of Jews in his schools.Does anyone who favors betterrace relations in the UnitedStates believe that this can beaccomplished by institutingracial quotas in the various in¬stitutions around the nation?Should we have a military thatis racially apportioned, with pro¬motion in the officer corps madeonly as a senior member of aracial hgwuptejfljqs |6Wr01retires?i > to, iVdofl .}bbl»h Shall we then extend that systemto the civil service and the of¬fices of public trust throughoutthe nation?THERE ARE OTHER problems as well, with the section onenrollment. Why does the Univer¬sity have debts particularly tothe surrounding area? More im¬portant, to what end should theUniversity forsake national re¬cruiting of students eitherblack or white — that it can con¬centrate on obtaining less qual¬ified students from the Chicagoarea who would then grow upwith a more parochial outlook asa result. There are not enoughstudents in Woodlawn to enter afreshman class at Chicago with¬out significantly lowering thestandards of that class. Shall theUniversity then lower its stan¬dards, and become the nth juniorcollege in the Chicago junior col¬lege system?In any case a stronger, betterpetition for action could havebeen written had it been directedagainst the city of Chicago in¬stead of the University, which at¬tempts merely to survive andprosper without offending anyone.Mr. Moscow is news editor ofThe Maroon.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800 Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.4. Student Press Assn., pub-Mgfl?t83QjdColttdi*te Press Serfae.v :vr oi mol •>v-'i '■»*,&* '*<•> , t> V.-.»**>t . 14 - 4 ' • ■* *■ / V 4AMERIKAi By Mary SueLeightonThe Maroon—DAVID TRAVISThe Blackfriars9 latest musical comedy in a long historyof original productions promises a worthwhile evening.JUDGING a play from a dressrehearsal requires as much aneffort of imagination as of criti¬cal facilities. You have to sortout inherent defects from thoselikely to be weeded out by thedirector in a lecture being visiblyconstructed as the final run-through trips along. Adding andsubtracting the effect of a reallive audience laughing at theright and wrong moments, youarrive at an estimation of thefinished product. On the whole,t h e Blackfriars’ “Amerika,”adapted from Kafka's book byJonathan Ward, survives thisprocess of evaluation quite well.The most striking feature ofthe play, one that would salvagethe most inept production (whichthis, by the way, isn’t) is themusic, written by Barry Salinsand orchestrated by DavidZverow. The melodies are gener¬ally light and catchy, but nottrite. The lyrics are always ap¬propriate, not strained to fit thetune or the scene, and thesnatches played during scenechanges are both inobtrusive andentertaining.THE INFECTIOUSNESS of themusic shows up most significant¬ly in the chorus, which swingsbrightly through some fairlycomplicated patter. If occasion¬ally the words are unintelligibleand the chaos unplanned, thefault probably lies with the mu¬sic, rather than the discipline ofthe group. In a couple ofinstances, the chorus gives somereally impressive displays of mu¬sical maneuvering in counter¬point.Individual actors vary in per¬formance, but the overall qualityis good. Alan Rudnik plays thehighly seducible young Germanimmigrant Karl Rossman, withjust the right dash of naivete.Rudnik has, however, an unfor¬tunate habit of waiting percep¬tibly for his cues — a habitwhich causes a loss in credibilityin otherwise flawless scenes.(This is hopefully one of thosefaults that will be corrected byshow time.)THE WOMEN in Karl’s lifeare a mixed lot. Barbara Ebertis the remarkably forward andaltogether puzzling daughter of abusiness friend of Karl’s uncle.She teases Karl into a hilariousrepartee that ends with one ofthe better songs of the score.Barbara Bemstien plays Therese,the hotel maid, who becomeshelplessly incompetent in her job when Karl arrives to work at thehotel. Although she seems tohave trouble making herselfheard past the first few rows,she delivers her lines well, witha kind of subtlety that makesthem doubly effective.Ted Hearne and Bryan Dunlapplay the pretty villainous villainsdownfall of the hero. Hearne israther vaguely uncouth at thebeginning, when he is a bellow¬ing new German immigrantworking as stoker on Karl’s ship.He begins to warm up in the“Rob your neighbor” scene, how¬ever. He reappears as Dela-marche, the lover, an insatiableand delightfully whorish operasinger, and carries off the rolewith baronial polish. Dunlap, ashis sidekick, Robinson, slinks and stumbles and grovels like astrange combination of Faginand the Artful Dodger. The twoare especially good in their devil¬ish duets.THE OPERA star Brunelda(Susan Scheid) is undoubtedlythe most consistent (and hilari¬ous) character in the play.Every reversal is a tragedy,which she greets enthusiasticallywith an appropriate wail, andevery male a prospect, whomshe greets enthusiastically witha piece of cake, etc. She andDelamarche do a balcony scenethat is probably one of the bestin the show.In sphe of the overall goodacting, “Amerika” suffers froma few shortcomings, large andsmall. A short opening scene, in¬ troducing Karl and setting thestage for the action of the play,is singularily uninspired. On twoor three occasions, several mem¬bers of the chorus set to dancing,for apparently no reason, andwith apparently little practice.The latter can be taken care of,but the greatest problem is ex-raneousness: the dances are dis¬pensable. Here and there themusic snags on a singer whoserange doesn’t include that parti¬cular set of notes, and sometimesa good singer snags on musicless than brilliant in its concep¬tion. One or two songs end withstartling abruptness, leaving theaudience hanging.THE MOST jarring scene of allis the last — which is decidedlya surprise: the story by this time has gained so much momentumthat it seems suddenly to stop,rather than finish. Regardless ofwhether the original book, and/or the script end where theBlackfriars do, the pace oughtto be adjusted slightly before thelast word is uttered, so that theaudience may expect that it isthe last word. The timing is off.(This criticism may be truer ofthe dress rehearsal, which wasa bit choppy, than of the publicperformance.)If Director Ken Pierce canwork out the various technicaldefects (scene changes, for in¬stance, are a bit clumsy) thatinterrupt the progress of theotherwise well put together pro¬duction, “Amerika” promises tobe very good indeed..WEEKEND MAGAZINE May 3, 1968If these kids don’t make it,neither do we.These are big city school children. They are partnersof all who try to build and keep our cities alive with hopeand promise of personal dignity. If we fail these partners,they will fail, as finally will we all.To the Bell System, they also are customers and,prospectively, many are fellow employees. Those we hirewill bring with them attitudes and skills produced by citylife and city schools. Their qualities will help shape thequality of our service. And service is our product.Bell System companies and people are increasinglyengaged to help meet the problems of the cities, especiallythose concerning education and employability. In theseareas our skills and other business resources may haveextra value. We shall try to keep our deeds outrunningour words. AT&T>« tnuM CmhmiCULTURE VULTUREUNIVERSITY THEATERthe Old Vic of the campus is pre¬senting Oscar Wilde’s The Impor¬tance of Being Earnest. Accord¬ing to Mark Rosin the directorwho also staged The Changeling,“The play is a stylized drawing¬room comedy with a strong un¬der-current of repressed pas¬sion.” A Beardsley art-mouveaudecor along with incidental musicwill heighten the effect. The per¬formance is sold out for openingnight, but tickets can be pur¬chased for the productions inReynold’s Club on Saturday andSunday at 8:30 p.m.The University’s other produc¬tion company, Blackfriars, ispresenting their production ofKafka’s Amerika (by way of Jon¬athan Ward and Barry Salins).The performances are Fridayand Saturday in Mandel at 8:30p.m. Tickets are $2.50 and $2.00with a $.50 student discount.Elsewhere near campus, Park¬way Theatre, 500 E. 67th St. ispresenting another look at Amer¬ika (sic. or should we say sick)and its little “excursions” intoSouth East Asia, Viet-Rock byMegan Terry. Bitterly slashingand vibrant, this play tears awayall the embellishments of warand any justification for thiswar. It opens this Friday, andwill play weekends through July.Performances Friday and Satur¬day evening are at 8:30 p.m. andSunday at 7:30 p.m. Student tick¬ets are $1.50. FilmsTonight Doc Films gives us thelong-awaited chance to see Lu¬chino Visconti’s Senso in its orig¬inal, uncut, and color version.The film, made in 1954 but nevershown here except in a highlybastardized version, is consid¬ered by many critics to be Vis¬conti’s masterpiece. It is defin¬itely the key film in his work,showing the relationship betweena revolutionary struggle and apersonal love affair. A Chicagopremier not to be missed.Saturday, Henderson Housepresents Breathless, Jean-LucGodard’s most often shown .andmost disappointing film. But thenagain, it is the beginning of abrilliant career. On Sunday HillelHouse is presenting a film calledImpossible On Saturday de¬scribed as a French-Israeli co¬effort.Tuesday Doc Films’ John Fordcontinues with Fort Apache andRio Grande, two early and un¬ usual westerns. Wednesdaybrings Andy Warhol’s work tothe Chicago, after its long ab¬sence. The Nude Restaurant willbe shown in all its glory. In color,the film includes a dialogue be¬tween superstar Viva and a mem¬ber of the Resistance.Along with the Warhol, DocFilms is showing Samuel Fuller’sForty Guns, a violent and beau¬tiful comment on America andthe west starring none other thanBarbara Stanwick.Downtown Madigan has justopened. This is the newest filmof Don Siegel, the leading B-filmdirector around today, and iseminently worth the trip.At 8 p.m. Friday and Saturdaythe Blue Gargoyle presents thefirst part of one of India’s greatfilms, Satyajit Ray’s Apu Tril¬ogy. The music for this film wascomposed by Ravi Shanker, andthe Gargoyle promises to havea new sound ssytem installed tobetter reproduce the superbcore. Jimmy’sand the University RoomSchiltz on tapFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.TJu.>^ ty 'Tinntsse^4*ComingIn WEEKEND:More of thePop Culture Series iocr 4FRANZ KAFKA’S“This show will makemusical history!”- Barry Salins, Composer “The dialogue sparkleswith wit!”- Jonathan Ward, Author “ BRILLIANT&ELECTRIFYING!”— Ken Pierce, Director\0*V rOMAMERIKA %AN ORIGINAL MUSICAL!!! THE 1968 BLACKFRIARS SMACH!FINAL PERFORMANCES!FRIDAY! SATURDAY! at 8:30!!!Mandel Hall57th & University Tickets: $2.50, $2.00with 50C Student Discount Reservations:Mandel Hall Box Officeor MI-3-0800, Ext. 3580i/ / i May 3> 1968 ■\ r . WEEKEND MAGAZINE ’ SMONEYAVAILABLEUniversity National has money available to loan now—in this communityto—facultystaffstudentsbusiness menfor—auto loansboat loanscommercial and industrialreal estate mortgagescondominium financingconstruction loansexpansion loansFHA loanshome furnishings andappliance loans business womenprofessional menprofessional womenarea residentshome improvement loanshome mortgagesinstallment loansmedical loansmachinery and equipment financingmodernization loanspersonal loanstrailer loanstuition loansvacation loansAnd for almost any other kind of loan you may need.It’s part of our way of saying 'thank you' to the community in which we make ourhome-part of our way of building with Hyde Park-Kenwood by providing morefinancial support to the community itself.So, if you need money for any worthwhile purpose, stop in and see one of our officers.They’ll be happy to put some of that available money to work for you.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60651TELEPHONE MU 41200strength and serviceG3 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association / Federal Reserve SystemWEEKEND MAGAZINE May 3, 1968Letters to the Editors of The MaroonUnderclassAlthough, as someone pointedout with regard to the misspel¬lings on page eight of the April26 issue — the SVCG petition ofsupport—one is really ratherlucky NOT to have one’s nameprinted in The Maroon (VirgilBurnett, for example, may neverbe the same), still I must raise aquerulous voice to point out thatSVCG, like most student groups,has sought support from studentsand faculty but not, alas, fromthat invisible caste, the Univer¬sity staff.For all the cries of power—stu¬dent, black, women, and othehr-wise—no group has thought toseek staff support. There was acertain wry comedy to one ex¬ample of this: students solicitingbail money for the west-side riot¬ers, during one 15-minute periodwhen I observed in front of hebookstore, gave flyers to all butthe secretaries and workmenwho passed by—some of themNegroes.There is, of course, some de¬light in being spared at leastpart of the paper-and-pamphletfallout, but it does seem likepoor tactics for those studentswho really care about change.Many of us are members of theHyde Park, South Shore, or gen¬eral Chicago (if there is such athing) communities more thanwe are of the University com¬munity. There are likely to beideological barriers similar tothe barriers student politiciansoften experience—or imagine—inChicago communities. Perhpasyou could look at us as practise for the outside world: a sort ofMeet the Lumpenproletariatmovement.JANET KRAVETZAdministrative AssistantNew Collegiate Division'Misleading'Your comments (in the April26 issue) concerning our researchon parity non-conservation weremisleading.The crucial experiments thatproved Lee and Yang right weredone by three teams and not bythree men: a Bureau ofStandards-Columbia collabora¬tion, a Columbia group (involv¬ing R. L. Garwin, a ChicagoPh.D.), and J. Friedman and my¬self here at the Fermi Institute.Attributing undeserved creditto a scientist and his Institutionis as damaging as the suppres¬sion of his achievements. TheMaroon and the Public Relatiqnsoffice of the University should beaware of this.V. L. TELEGDIProfessor of PhysicsCrisis ResponseThe University’s immediate re¬sponse to Roy Gutmann’s deathof strengthening security is atbest a regrettable necessity.However, it does not seem a par¬ticularly fitting memorial tosomeone who was dedicated tothe concept of non-violence. In asmall way, it is similar to May¬or Daley’s initial response to theriots, when he called for betteraim and more target practice.I am not denying that in theshort run it is a necessary step.However, the University could do and should do much more forthe community, city, and societyof which it is a part.Roy Gutmann’s death, coupledwith the assasination of MartinLuther King and the riots thatfollowed, must not be allowed togo by without a positive responsefrom the University. If the Uni¬versity, this community, and ourcountry are going to survive, itis time that everyone begins tothink positively of what they cando. Here at Chicago, the Com¬mittee for a Responsible Univer¬sity is calling on the Universityto do its small share for the bet¬terment of all.WE ARE asking that they nottear down any more housing inWoodlawn until adequate ar¬rangements and low-cost housinghave been built for the peoplewho live in these buildings. Weare requesting also that the Uni¬versity admit approximately 20percent black students in futureclasses. This demand is set pur¬posely high because we believethat the University and the so¬ciety have a long overdue obliga¬tion to black people which canonly be fulfilled by strong com¬pensatory measures. This is notintended to be a “fixed quota”,The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueMAY 5SUNDAY AFTERNOON at 3.30BUDAVARITE DEUMZoltan KodalyMASS IN F MINORAnton Bruckner(First Chicago Performance)RICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith 50 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAEDWARD MONDEL LO,organistPeggy Smith, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa,contraltoRobert Bowker, tenorHenri Noel, baritoneTickets: $2.50 for students of allcolleges and universities$3.00 UC Faculty/Staff$3.50 General Admission$4.50 Reserved SeatsOn Sale at: U. of C. Bookstore,5802 Ellis AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore,13 11 E. 57th StreetCooley’s Candles,521 I Harper AvenueTicket Central at 212 N. Michiganandatall Montgomery Ward StoresDOW SHALT NOT KILL!• On May 8th in MIDLAND. MICHIGAN, Dow Chemical Corpora¬tion will hold its annual stockholders’ meeting.• Many persons in that meeting will call on Dow to cancel itsNAPALM CONTRACTS with the Defense Depart¬ment.• To focus national attention on Dow, a massive demonstrationis planned outside the meeting in Midland.JOIN US in Ann Arbor on Tuesday evening, May 7th, at 8 PM for arally at First Methodist Chirch, 120 S. State St.MOTORCADE to Midland (approx. 100 mi. north) Wed. AM, May 8th.• INFORMATION on rides (cars, buses) accommodations, etc. inChicago contact: Chris McCandless (Clergy &Laymen Cone’.) day : 427-2533, night: (after 10)624-4904.Sponsored by: Clergy & Laymen Concerned About Viet NamCHICAGO INSTITUTE FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION1525 East 53rd StreetChfcago, Illinois 60615PRESS RELEASEThe Chicago Institute for Early Childhood Education (affiliated with Loyola University) is a brandnew training institution for pre-primary teachers. Graduates from the Institute are equipped to bekey people in day care centers, nursery schools, kindergartens and, above all, Head Start.Applicants with a B.A. degree from an accredited liberal arts college interested in working withyoung children are eligible for the program, which leads to a Master’s degree. The curriculum isinter-disciplinary, based on psychoanalytic theory of development and emphasizes the needs ofenvironmentally deprived children. According to OEO officials, CIECE is unique in the nation.It is the only Master's program exclusively geared to preschool education and especially designedfor work with children in poverty areas.The program is under the leadership of Maria W. Piers, Lorraine B. Wallech and Barbara T. Bowman.Applicants may address inquiries and requests for applications to:CIECE,1525 E. 53rd St. .Room 705 or phone: 493-2880. * April, 1968Chicago 60615 but a flexible guideline to aimfor.Yes, it does give “preferentialtreatment” to blacks, but it onlycompensates in a small way forthe “preferential treatment”blacks have received for severalhundred years. If we are goingto do away with racism inAmeria more than “equal treat¬ment must be given to blacks tomake up for the wrongs of thepast and the lateness of the hour.This is not discrimination in re¬verse, but only what is just.THE UNIVERSITY’S subse¬quent action of setting up a 750,000 dollar scholarship programand an Upward Bound programare very fine first steps and de¬serve to be applauded. Yet theyare only first steps and stillmuch more must be done. Ac¬tions such as these would be amuch better response to whathas happened than retreating be¬hind a network of police. Need¬less to say, these further stepswould do much more to attackthe cause of his death ’and ofwhite racism in our society.PETER STONE, ’68 Draft SurveyAs one who has signed the Spe¬cial Vietnam Convocation Groupstatement pledging to refuse toserve in the Vietnam war, I wishto publically clarify my position.I signed the statement only af¬ter reluctant consideration.Along with several other signersof the statement, I hesitated tosign because I feel that the state¬ment is too limited in its scope.Along with the other pacifistsand conscientious objectors whosigned the statement, I want tomake it clear that my refusal ap¬plies to any war, whether in Viet¬nam, Korea, or California, andregardless of how popular such awar may be.CHARLES L. SMITH, ’68Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.Henderson presentsBREATHLESSJean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Sebergin Godard’s MasterpieceCobb Hall, Sat. May 4, 7:15-9:15 $1Cohn & Stern(Fount & (EampitBShopFIRST MATE JACKETFrom H.I.S. comes a jacket to keep you dry throughshowers & sea squalls. Made of quick drying, light¬weight Nylon, with a hidden hood to protect fromwindblown sea 8c sand. Drawstring collar 8c waist.Sizes S, M, L, XL, in navy or bronze. $10Hyde Park Shopping Center Open Daily til 655th & Lake Park Thursday & Friday til 9HMa» \W81 W#* 7Maroon Bulletin of Current EventsCALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyonce.GENERAL NOTICES should be submittedin typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a maximumof twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with repre¬sentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSFriday, May 3COMEDY: (University Theater), "The Im¬portance of Being Earnest." Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 p.m. $1.50 students, $2 other.TRAVELOGUE: (International House Asso¬ciation), "Mexico and Central America."Homeroom, International House, 8 p.m.$1, students 50 cents.MUSICAL COMEDY: (Blackfriars), "Ameri-ka." Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $2.50,$2; student discount 50 cents.LECTURE: (Hillel Foundation), "The Prob¬lem of War in the Jewish Tradition,"Rabbi David S. Shapiro, University ofWisconsin, Milwaukee. Hillel House, 8:30p.m. EXHIBIT: Sculpture by Gunther Aron. HillelHouse, through May 25.SEMINAR: (Commitiee on Social Thought),"The Outlook of Personal Knowledge."Social Science 106, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: (Biophysics), "Contractile Pro¬cess om Fibrous Macromolecules," LeoMandelkern, Florida State University. Re¬search Institutes 480, 4 p.m.FILM: (Doc Films), "Senso," by Visconti.Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. $1.CONCERT: (Collegium Musicum), MotetChoir, Josquin Concert. Bond Chapel, 8p.m.RADIO: (WFMT), "Conversations at Chi¬cago," Sir Geoffrey de Freitas, Memberof British Parliament; Etienne Hirsch,International President of the EuropeanFederalist Movement; Kenneth Northcott,WFMT, 10:30 p.m.Saturday, May 4COMEDY: (University Theater), "The Im¬portance of Being Earnest." See Friday'slisting.DISCUSSION: (Chicago Chapter, AmericanSociety of Geolinguistics), "World Lingui¬stic Diversity: Problems and Solutions,"William Marquart, University of lllinois;Duncan Charters and Eleanor Higginbot-tom, University of Indiana. InternationalHouse, rm. B, 2:45 p.m.MUSICAL COMEDY: (Blackfriars), "Ameri-ka." See Friday's listing.READING: Public reading by The ReverendDouglas L. Saxby, associate artistic di¬rector of the Festival Theatre in SanAnselmo, California, and a performingactor. FILM: (henderson House), "Breathless."Quantrell Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.TELEVISION SERIES: "Charlando," aEpanish language program. WGN-TV,Channel 9, 11:30 a.m.SQUARE DANCING: Ida Noyes DanceRoom, 7:30 p.m.CONCERT: (Collegium Musicum), MotetChoir. See Friday's listing.FILM: (Hillel House), "Impossible on Sa¬turday." Hillel House, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.$1 students, $1.50 other.GATHERING: (Lutheran Church at UC),"Reflections on a Theology of Violence,"Dr. Franklin Sherman, ethics professorDivinity School. Chapel House; supper,5:30, speaker, 6:30 p.m.MEETING: (Chess Club), Plans for sendingtwo teams to Chicago Intercollegiate. Brieftalk by Marvin Winston, President of aNYC chess club. Ida Noyes Sun Parlor,3 p.m.KUMSITZ: (Student Zionist Organization),Israel Independence Day Celebration, bar¬becue, fallafel, dancing. Hillel House, 5p.m. 75 cents.MEETING: People's Land and FreedomParty. 5431 S. Kimbark, 7 p.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: TheReverend Douglas L. Saxby (see Friday'slisting). Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11a.m.CONCERT: (Rockefeller Chapel Choir), Ko-daly, "Te Deum;" Bruckner, "Mass inF Minor;" conductor, Richard Vickstrom.Rockefeller Chapel, 3:30 p.m.TELEVISION SERIES: "The University of Chicago Round Table: "Pre-ConventionPolitics," J. David Greenstone, depart¬ment of Political Science; Kennethe P.O'Connell, former White House Appoint¬ments Secretary. WTTW, Channel 11, 5:30p.m.PHOTOGRAPHS NEEDED: Persons holdingpictures of people being arrested in lastSaturday's downtown march should* sendthem to the National Mobilization Commit¬tee or to Marc PoKempner, care of TheChicago Maroon.RUSSIAN FILMS: (U-High Russian Club),"Quiet Flows the Don" and "Last Game,"Clark Theater, continuous showings.RECRUITING VISITSMAY 3: A representative of the City ofChicago Teacher Corps program will in¬terview interested persons in this office.Career Counseling and Placement, Rey¬nolds Club, Room 200. They are seekingCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking June graduates who have not majored inthe field of education, but who wouldnowlike to teach disadvantaged childrenThe Teacher Corps combines professionaltraining with service in schools in dis¬advantaged areas.MAY 6: Public schools of the District ofColumbia, Washington, D. C. Elementary.Secondary: math, all science areas. Lib¬rarians and elementary and secondaryreading specialists and consultants. Inter¬ested only in qualified candidates whoare eligible for teacher certification.BE PRACTICALBUY UTILITY CLOTHESComplete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equipment,wash pants, sport shirts,pajlamas, hiking shoes,sweat pants, etc., etc., etc.,THE UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - IIn Photography the processingmakes a difference !Bring your film to the bookstore.We will do a good job for you carefullyPhotography DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenueon OZARK, that isWith Ozark’s new Weekend Unlimited fare, youcan fly to any of Ozark’s over 50 cities and backagain for just $30 plus tax ... as many cities asyou want to visit, or just one city, . . . you nameit, ... a real Flying Fling. Leave any timeSaturday, start your final flight before six P.M.the next day. So get up and go .Call your travel agent or Ozark Air Lines.go-getters goOZARKAIR LINES t TheseS»53 ,on'Model 212Portable Tape Recorder.This is the one you’ve beenhearing so much about. “Top-rated” by consumers everywhere,its features include a jam-proof “T” control for single lever operation, a 2-speed cap¬stan drive, and automatic level control for perfectrecordings every time. And best of all, a pricethat’s sure to please. Only $39.95.Model 2602 “Cassette” Recorder.The ultimate in recording ease andconvenience. Just pop in any stand¬ard cassette cartridge and “go”. Fea¬tures include automatic level record¬ing, remote-control mike, “piano-key” controls, cassette eject button,and battery condition meter. Perfectfor on-the-go recording. Only $69.95. Model 2106 Portable Tape Recorder.Here’s the “big-brother” to the famous“212” shown above. This completelyportable unit features 5-inch reel ca¬pacity for increased recording time,tone control with monitor facilities, abattery condition indicator, and indexcounter. Only $69.95.And remember Toad Hall’s price guarantee. If anyone offers a subsequent sale price (within30 days) lower than your purchase price, we will REFUND the difference IN CASH.8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 3, 1968MAROON SPORTSTennis Team Scores Seventh Victory of SeasonBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantBy virtue of recent preform-ances, the University tennis teamseems to be THE team to watchthis spring. In Tuesday’s actionthe squad scored their seventh vic¬tory of the season by completelydemolishing the George Williamsteam 8-1.Chicago has lost only a singlematch, and that by a five to fourscore. Although Coach Bill Moylecalled this week’s match “the bestthey’ve played this year,” almostevery match has been easy for theMaroon netters. In Tuesday’s sin¬gles, for example, the Universitytotalled 72 games against 17 forGeorge Williams. All but onematch, ‘ in fact, lasted only twos.The team’s controversial star,Tom McCroskey scored the strong¬est victory of the day by blank¬ing his first singles opponent 6-0,6-0. Jim Griffin continued the!slaughter by taking a 6-1, 6-3 sec¬ond singles win; he was followedby Mike Koch-Weser, 6-0, 6-2, DonMars, 6-0, 6-0, Earl Exteen, 6-1,6-4, and Mike Kass, 6-4, 6-2.In doubles action the first jGeorge Williams team carried Mc¬Croskey and Griffin three sets be¬fore giving up and suffered a a9-7,2-6, 6-1 loss. The teams of Koch-Weser-Mars and Exteen-Mass hadlittle trouble, however, and scored6-1, 6-4 and -75, 6-2 victories.GolfThe University golf team scoredan amazing 23M>- victory over Illi- Inois Institute of Technology Tues¬day but, due to the absence ofMike Nemeroff, dropped a simul¬taneous match to Chicago StateCollege, 12l/2-llM>.Chicago golfer Paul Chambers,the team’s number four man,pulled off the best overall scorefor the day with a tremendous 77.Mark Carpenter, number one, wasright behind him with a 78, whileJim Peterson and Pete Mundy alsofinished well with 79 and 83respectively. These four men all defeatedtheir Chicago State opponents, butCS was able to pick up points inother matches and snare thevictory.After a total of eight matches,Carpenter leads the Maroons withan 82 average.The golfers will compete in four¬way competition with NorthCentral College, Wayne State Uni¬versity, and Wheaton College atthe Cherry Hills Golf Clubtomorrow.TrackBradley University’s strongsquad outscored the Maroon track¬men 107-38 inade ce ptively easyvictory at Elmhurst CollegeTuesday.Although Chicago lost by 75points, they were often close be¬hind the winners and lost manyevents by very small margins. TheUniversity scored only three eventvictories but took six seconds andfive thirds. Chicago swept all three places in one event, the highump.Top scorer for the Maroon wasveteran Ted Terpstra, who tookvictories in the 440-yd. run and the440-yd. intermediate hurdles andfinished with ten points. Scott Fer¬ry won the high jump with an ex¬cellent 6’2” leap and scored fivepoints; Bond Medal winner JohnBeal failed to win any events buttook seconds in the long and triplejumps and a third in the highjump to notch eight points.Four other Maroon athletes tooksecond spots: Sean Peppard in the880-yd. run, Ken Thomas in thehigh jump, Jeff Melby in the threemile, and Jim Haydon in the jave¬lin. Haydon also finished third inthe 220-yard run competition.Completing the University scor¬ing were third place finishers RichJockman in the discus, DaveChase in the 220-yd. dash, JohnFekety in the three-mile, andSteve Riess in the javelin.Members of the varsity squad will compete in the Eastern Mich¬igan University open Saturday inYpsilanti.IntramuralsJack Weintraub of HendersonSouth defeated housemate RandyBovbjerg Monday night to win theall-University table tennis tourna¬ment.Weintraub was champion of thered division, having defeated Bov¬bjerg in the finals. In the bluedivision Jeff Landsman defeatedA1 Spaulding; both are fromChamberlin. A1 Lerner defeatedJerry Lapidus to win the greendivision in an all Flint I match.In the intramural golf tourna¬ment, Steve Perry of LaughlinHall won both the graduate andoverall individual titles with ascore of 72. Laughlin also won theteam championship as Perryjoined with John Zygmunt andMike Riodan to score 218 and aver¬age 73.Ken Joiner led University House to the College House champion¬ship by coming in with a anet 82and winning the House individualtitle himself. Doug Pfau at 87 andMike Radcliff at 90 also competedfor University House.Psi Upsilon took the fraternitygolf title as Steve Biggs won in¬dividual honors with an 84 andKen Hoganson and Steve Fredrick¬son finished with 87 and 92 re¬spectively.Second in the College house di¬vision was Henderson South witha 268 total (as compared to 259for University House). Phi Sigmaatook the second spot in the fortcompetition, totalling 314 and fin¬ishing far behind the victor’s 263.The University baseball squad,which suffered a 9-1 loss to theUniversity of Illinois (Circle Cam- ,pus) on Tuesday, will oppose Chi¬cago State College in a double-header tomorrow. The game willbe played at the North Centra'College field.Luchino Vicsonti’s SENSOA forerunner of neorealism, Visconti counterpoints personal tragedy with the sweep of historic events. Tonight, Cobb Hall. 7:15 and 9:30. $1.Doc Films.NEED:room?shipmate?a ride east-or anywhere away?an extra chair-with four legs?a job-god forbid?COME UNDERGROUNDMbNO EXTRA CHARGE FOR:1. four seat belts2. back up Lights3 sliding sunroof4. 4-speed synchronized transmission5. power brakes, disc front6 wall to-wall carpeting7. windshield washer8 two-speed heater/drfroster9 fully adjustable, reclining front seats10 stainless steel exterior trim 11. electric clock12. trip mileage counter13 front and rear center armrests14. bumper guards, rubber Inserts15. tool kit16. Michelln X (radial-ply) tires17. carpeted trunk18. fresh air ventilating system19. extra thick body steelWHAT ELSE DO YOUWANT FOR $2699?PEUGEOTcome indrive theall NEW '68NOW!LESL Y IMPORTS INC.PEUGEOT SALES WINNER for CHICAGO and MIDWEST2235 S. MICHIGAN 325-2550Preparation & Delivery Not Included The Purisf...Choice of the CollegianSero champions the traditional look on collegecampuses across the nation with its full-flaredPurist® button-down. Styled exclusively for thecollegian ... trimly tapered with a seven-buttonfront for a neater, slimmer appearance. A hostof new spring colourings and patterns in dis¬tinctive tattersals, checks, stripings and solids.Classic shirtmanship at its finest.AVAILABLE ATJERREM’S11 N. Wabash AvenueChicago, Illinois Squire Shop of Hinsdaleand 2nd and WashingtonHinsdale, Illinois3, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. TEN AM. TO 3P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.APARTMENTS WANTEDRespons. 3rd yr. FEM. GRADS, seek 5-7rm house/apt. Hyde Park. Oct.-June. Quar¬ter sublets O. K. BU 8-1100, Ext. 309.Needed for summer—2 bedroom APT. inHyde Park. Must be furnished. Please callJean. Ext. 3753.WANTED APARTMENTS FOR RENTAPARTMENT. 5 rooms. *125/month. 2blocks from Campus. Now. Call 667-7384.4 ROOM APT. avail. June 1. Near HarperCourt. $150/month. 684-6215.FOUR ROOM APT. Avail, in May. U.C.Married Student Housing.. $99/month. 920E. 61st Street. 324-6597.Luxurious apartment at 75th & Essex avail.June 15 for summer or year lease. Idealfor 3 people. $50 per person. Three bed¬rooms, 2 baths, living room, and diningroom. Drapes, carpeting, and furnishingsavail. Two blocks from 1C and campus bus.375-1951.APARTMENT FOR SALECONDOMINIUMHyde Park & 55th Street6 8. 7 rooms, 2 bathsPrice $20 500 & Up. DO 3-6842.ROOMS FOR RENTINEXPENSIVE ROOMS FOR SUMMERComplete Kitchen FacilitiesDirectly Across from the Quadrangle5747 S. University, PL 2-9718 ROOMMATES, 1 or 2, Pref. Grad. SpaciousApartment. Summer or Fall. 684-8018.FEMALE GRAD STUDENT seeks 2 room¬mates. 6/15 8. 9/15. Own room. $40/month,close to campus. Call IRIS at 684-7597.2 FEMALE ROOMMATES for summer. Furn.APT. 54th 8. University. $38/month. 684-7927.2 MALE GRADS, need 2 ROOMMATES,Sum 8,/or Aut. Have Huge Furn. Apt. in So.Shore. $48/month. 324-2671.WANTED: ONE GIRL to share Apt. for restof the quarter. Call 324-7637.1 GIRL WANTED to share fully furnished5 ROOM APT. w/one other, June-Oct. Large,elegant room w/unusual features. Ideal lo¬cation. Call evenings, 324-3623.ROOMMATE WANTED to share Apt. forSummer. Own Bedroom. Furn. 752-3737.3-4 FEM. ROOMMATES wanted for summerand one til end of quarter. Air Cond. 684-6883.OWN ROOM w. bath, nr. 53rd 8, Dorchester.June-Sept. Call Ken Cutler or Scott Staple-ton. PL 2-9718.FOR SALE HOUSE FOR SALEHOUSE FOR SALESouth Shore deluxe Georgian 7 rooms,3 bdrms., formal dining room, paneled den 8<rec room, l'/i ceramic baths, cent, air cond.,2 wd-burning fireplaces, w/w carpet, drapes,appliances, 2 car brick garage. Near 81stand Crandon. Upper 20's. Private. Call375-7209.SUBLETAPT to sublet. 53rd 8. Dorchester. June toSept. Call 955-0817 after 10 P.M.ONE ROOM APT. Sublet 6/15 - 9/15. $80/mo. (ind. util.) WILL BARGAIN. Furn.5111 S. University. Call 493-3918 (after 6).FURN. 4 ROOM APT. Clean, Sunny. June,July to Sept. FLEXIBLE. 752-8814.SUMMER SUBLET. 3 rooms. $120, includingutilities. 5107 S. Blackstone. 493-7592.June 15 to Sept. 15. AVt ROOM APT., nextto Lake, Furnished. $135 a month. Call Joelat 288-2781.APT. AVAILABLE June 15-September. 3-4bedrooms, furnished, near 58th 8, Kenwood,684-0579. SUMMER SUBLET. 3V* ROOMS. For lperson. $105/month. 667-5307.Clean, well-furnished 4 room APT. June toOct. 1. At 5304 University. Safe. Near Camp¬us 8. Shopping. 643-4007 after 6 P.M.MORE SUBLETSSure doesn't look like there's going to beanyone In Hyde Park this summer. . .3 ROOM SUMMER SUBLET—furnished, car¬peted, safe building. 56th 8. Kenwood. Ele¬vator 8< Laundry. $120/mo., incl. util. 955-3949FEM. RMMATES. Wanted. Furn. Air Con¬ditioned. Own Room, 324-7294.SUMMER SUBLET. 5 ROOMS, luxuriouslyfurnished, large library (esp. Russian 8,French Lit.), well-stocked spice shelf, et al.June 15-Sept. 15. App. $100. Will bargain'Ideal for couple. 667-8278. 53rd 8. University!2 FEMALE GRADS, needed from June 17 toSept. 17. APT. Fully furnished. Air cond.$43/month per person. Call 363-1245.SUBLET 2 BEDROOM APT. $160. Nearshopping, I.C., June 1. Call 288-0946.Sublet June 1 to Sept. 1. Furnished 4 ROOM,2 bedroom Apt. Kenwood near 52nd. Rent$100/month. 493-8635.LOVELOVELOVELOVELOVSEXLOVELOVEBRADLEY senior would like to Join asmall group after July 15 to see Europeeconomically or arrange a trip with 1, 2,or 3 others. Write to JO ANN FLESHER,Box 324, 821 N. University, Peoria, Illinois.A POLICE FORCE in Chicago that isdedicated to preserving LAW and order, notlust the "order" of Mayor Daley.WANTED: Responsible person(s) to drivemy VW stationwagon to Palo Alto, Californ¬ia in late June. Call Professor Azrael, Ext.2995.ONE MALE BIKE. Will pay $20. Call SladeLander. 288-7961 or MU 4-6100, Ext. 5800.Car/truck going to Berkeley June 1-15 tohaul a few prized possessions. Will shareexpenses. 363-2766.WANTED: Tuba player to play with well-known banjo band 1 or 2 nights per week.Pay scale. 825-5283.WILL SHARE DRIVING 8. EXPENSES toNorthwest Coast to arrive May first. PhoneKarl Simon at 643-6549.If you need a roommate (male) for summer& next year or have an apartment avail¬able in June for 2, Call Mike or Jeff at752-9511. Hyde Park only.MARCHERS—calling for an honest, orderlypolice force in Chicago. Who needs brutalpuguglies in uniform?MUSICFAREWELL CONCERTIChicago's Last Opportunity to see A hearTHE ART ENSEMBLE—Roscoe Mitchell,Lester Bowie, Mala chi Favors—SUNDAY,May 5, QUANTRELL AUDITORIUM at 58thA Ellis. 10 P.M. to Midnight. SUMMER AND NEXT YEAR. 5625 Wood-lawn. ROOMS WITH WARMTH. 684-9608.WORKNeed TYPIST with electric typewriter totype 200 STENCILS. 643-6039.WAITRESS WANTED. Full or Part-time.Weekends. Apply in person or call 643-6131-32.FULL-TIME WAITRESS. Must be able towork Lunches. Good tips. Pleasant work.Good music. COURT HOUSE RESTAJANT.5211 S. HARPER.Retailers are waiting to give you ordersfor EAST TOTEM WEST posters. Commis¬sion equals $100.00 a week for 20 hours.Write: EAST TOTEM WEST. P. O. Box765, Mill Valley, California 94941.RESEARCH ASSISTANT WANTED. Collegegrad., math or physical science backgrounddesired. MALE OR FEAAALE. 40 hours/week. Call 667-0240.APARTMENTS TO SHARENeed FEMALE ROOMMATE. Own room &bath. Good location. Summer or longer.Furnished for summer. 684-5366.FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. $45/month,2 blocks from Campus. 643-1407 after 5.FEMALE ROOMAAATE for Summer. Share6 room APT. Large room, furnished w/airconditioner. $51. Call 667-8811.Need FEMALE STUDENT to share APT.with 2 fern. grad, students. June 10-August31. Own room, air cond., furn. 363-5267.ROOMMATES wanted to share luxuriouslyfurn. 8 room APT. Own room $62/monthincl. rent, utilities, cleaning woman, manyextras. Call BU 8-6610, Room 2315 or 2322.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9Ml-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED-FREE TECHNICAL ADVICESales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’sTape Recorders-Phonos-AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges-Tubes-Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsNEW for ringDESIGNS . LEADERSRings to put on!Huge and petite ringsto wear single or by thetwos and threes. Exoticharem rings, princess rings,Taxco silver hands. Many excitingdesigns in abalone and preciousstones carefully handcrafted in gold andsterling silver and imported for youfrom Africa, Asia and LatinAmerica. Many one of a kind.Come in today!Popular Prices from7.50 to 99.50teesInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 321-7600Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. dally; Noon to 5 p.m. Sunday '67 HONDA 50. Low mi. Exc. Cond. $175 orbest offer; 643-0211 (dinner time).SINGLE BED, DESK, LAMP DESK. BU8-1262.JAGUAR, 1961 MK 2, 3. 4 SEDAN, ExcellentCondition, Overdrive, Radio. Phone 684-7884.UNKNOWN MAKE OFFICE MODEL TYPE¬WRITER. $25 or Best Offer. Call Steve atExt. 3269.Call for information about Used and NewHI-FI Equipment FOR SALE. 256-4785 after7 P.M.BEAUTIFUL dbl. bed, chest, table, 3 gall¬ons Benj. Moore Paint. 955-3949.1960 CORVAIR. 50,000 miles. Good Cond.684-2331.HONDA '65. Exc. Cond. 684-7701 after 5.'65 VOLKSWAGEN. Blue Sedan. Exc. Cond.R & H. Many extras. Only 30,000 miles.$1,050. Call 288-8714.UNDERCLASSMEN: STOCK YOUR PADSwell from the furniture at 6020 S. Woodlawn.EVERYTHING must go, since the bui'ding'sgoing too. Stop by or call HY 3-4206 forappointment. CHEAP! CHEAP! CHEAP!CHEAP! CHEAP! Weiss, Woolams, Lawya,Greenberg 8> Company.UacD t-urn. for Sa,e & Metal Closet. 752-7362. SUBLET: 2Vi ROOM furnished APT. June-Sept. $116. Call 684-2134.JOLLY OLD ENGLISH BASEMENT to sub¬let til Sept. $81.50. 67th & Paxton. Exc.Trans, via Campus Bus. 324-6259, anytime.SUBLET furnished 6 room apt. 2 baths.5427 Blackstone. 363-5780.Sublet with OPTION TO RENEW Oct. 1.ONE GIGANTIC ROOM in basement. Com¬plete kitchen. Available June 15. $75/month.In South Shore. Campus Bus Stop on Corner.MU 4-5949, evenings.APT. TO SUBLET. 53rd 8. Dorchester. Juneto Sept. Call 955-0817 after 10 P.M.SUBLET June 15-Sept. 15. Completely furn¬ished, 2 bedroom Apt. South Shore. $135.375-9425, evenings.SUBLET, June-Sept. 5423 Dorchester, 4ROOMS. Furnished, includes queen-size bed& beautiful refrig. $105/month. Will Bargain.955-0672 or leave message at Ml 3-6000,Room 336.SUBLET V/j ROOMS. 57th & Blackstone.June 10-Sept. $98/month. 684-0067.Female Roommate Wanted to sublet fromJune 15. Oct. option. Own Room. Near Camp¬us and 53rd. Call 324-6418.June 15 to Sept. 2 BEDROOMS. Furn. 5400Dorchester. $95/month. 493-9586. 3 BEDROOMS, living, dining, kitchen, 2baths, partially turn., 6/15 to 9/15. 852 E.57th Street. 752-58682Vi ROOM Furnished APT. on Harper nearCo-op. June to Oct. 1. $100. Woman Pref.667-5312.SUMMER SUBLET. Lovely, Furnished 6ROOM APT. Inexpensive. 54tth & Kenwood.288-3576.APT. AVAILABLE. mid-June to mid-Sept.3-4 BEDROOMS, Furnished. Peaceful. 51st& Kimbark. $190/month. 324-7764.3-Vi rm. furn. APT. 55th & blkstne. June 8-Sept. 15. $180/mo., util. incl. PL 2-9874.Gordon.MORE CLASSIFIEDS ON PAGE 11PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933WHATLIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positionsavailable for students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueWe hove thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.1720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too! IS YOURSTANDARDFORLIVING ?There’s no limit to the good aman can accomplish through re¬liance on God. But it takeshumility and a deep spiritualcommitment. You learn to de¬pend on the divine Love thatmakes possible every worth¬while act. You’re invited tohear this subject explored fur¬ther at a one hour public lec¬ture by Norman B. Holmes ofThe Christian Science Board ofLectureship. Everyone iswelcome to come and listen.cihstiaB scieoce lecioreWednesday, May 8 4 PmSwift Hall CommonsSponsored byChristian Science OrganizationU0 SPUE CHICAGO MAROON May 8, 1968if * ' > ' : ■■ksb i mm a •Afore Maroon Classified AdsSpacious, 8 ROOM APT. 3 bedrooms 8i 2baths. $140/month, but June Rent FREE.52nd & Greenwood. Call 667-1117.5 ROOMS. $125/month. Sublet to Dec. Nicebuilding. 6106 S. Ingleside. Avail. Now. Call667-7384.AND YET MOREJune to Sept. 5 ROOMS. Huge Ivg. room,sun room, study, turn. One of Hyde Park'snicest. $150. 493-6507 or Ext. 3397.June 10-Oct. 1. SPACIOUS completely fur¬nished, 3 bedrooms, 5810 S. Harper. 752-7689.TRAVELEscape Chicago! Marco Polo Travel. 288-5944.ISRAEL, GREECE & EUROPE: 51 Daysincluding 8 days cruising from Venice toYogoslavia to Greece and 2 weeks in Israel.All hotels and transportation. 19 meals notincluded. Students and young teachers only.$1217. Transatlantic jet not included. . . orspecial N.S.A. trip for students only for $795plus transatlantic pet to New York. Studentsonly, same itinerary. Call Dick RO 4-6264.CASH$50 CASH BONUS for your APT. (5 or morerooms in Hyde Park), 3 grads; 684-8480.KITTENSTUNISIAN GREY male kitten. 6 weeks.Affectionatae. Free. 684-7927.TYPING SERVICEEXPERIENCED REASONABLE RATES.Will furnish paper. Call 568-3056 after 7 P.M.EXPERT TYPING SERVICE. Reasonablerates. Prompt, accurate, no bullshit. CallHarry at BU 84500.DANCESJAM FOR THE PEOPLE!Benefit forSCLC Poor People's Campaign6052 Kimbark Friday TonightBEAUX ARTS MASQUERADE BALLMay 3 at 8:30 Ida NoyesMAHOGANY HALL BLUES BANDFREE TICKETSavailable at Reynolds Club for students &faculty.GOOD SAMARITANBUYING A EUROPEAN CAR? How aboutletting responsible young marrieds pick itup and use it in Europe this Summer? WILLPAY. 667-8283.PERSONALSRAVI SHANKAR at the BLUE GARGOYLE.HORSEBACK RIDING SCHOOLOwned and operated by Hyde Park group forEuperior Instruction. Beginners and Advanced—jumping and dressage. Horses oarded.Call 643-9866 or 268-6835SUPPORT STRIKING COLUMBIA STUD¬ENTS! Rally 12:30 Friday, Hutch Quad.Protest, Apathy, Sex, Hate, Love, AC/DC,Apple pie—whatever your trip—don't missRoscoe Mitchell.Take the monotony out of monogamy.Has dressing gone out of style? SeeAMERIKA and find out. May 3, 4.Marijuana will be legal some day soon,because the many law students who nowsmoke pot will some day become Congress¬men anl egalize it in order to proctectthemselves.YOGA—Exercises, concentration, and med¬itation lifts consciousness beyond existentialhopy and despair to tranuiliqty and ecstasy.Yogi Sri Neorde. DO 3-0155. "I don't believe the President of the UnitedStates ought to debate with anybody."—Chairman LBJWhat is your standard for living?"In truth, woman has not been sociallyemancipated through man's need—sexualdesire and the desire for offspring—whichmakes the male dependent for satisfactionupon the female."Why doesn't U.C. work with the TEACHERCORPS? Is it too busy developing newmethods to teach the "deprived children"of the Lab School.India's greatest film, Satyajit Ray's APUTRILOGY, Friday & Saturday, 8 p.m. 50c.Sound Track by RAVI SHANKAR.Can America be salvaged? Tune in May 10th*Eat at AHMAD'S tonight. 1440 E. 57th Street.Who is the nde exhibitionist in the lobby?See AMERIKA, May 3, 4.See IMPOSSIBLE ON SATURDAY at Hillel,Sunday at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.See Belmondo fight Magaloplis & SoullessWomen, Saturday night in Cobb. •What should be is bird standing in theBANDERSNATCH.The University of Chicago took up theWHITE MAN'S BURDEN and moved itfurther South, BIO MAJORS. Trip out toRock River.BUDDY GUY: The New Lost City Ramblersof the R & B Festival.See the College Bowl Team make a saladof Seidman, Satter, Chikovsky, and Sorkin.Et tu, College Bowl Team, a Ceasar Salad?Going to Europe this summer?See AMERIKA first.Roscoe Mithchell will burn a hole in yourRoscoe Mitchell will bum a hole in yor soul.—OlantunjlDOW SHALT NOT KILL I ! IJoin the caravan to Midland, Michigan.Demonstrate/Protest napalm contracts atAnnual Dow stockholders - meeting. For info:Call Chris McCandless Day at 427-2533; After11 p.m., 624-4904.• CLERGY & LAYMEN CONCERNED •RETRACTIONOn April 26, 1968, Rafael Ortiz was erron¬eously listed as a faculty member support¬ing draft resistance.Chicago's improvement on the absent-mind¬ed professor: The Absentee Professor.The Third Annual RHYTHM AND BLUESFESTIVAL: Buddy Guy, Johnny Shines,Walter Horton, Johnny Young, J. B. Hutto,and L. V. Johnson. Thursday night, May 16.Tickets — $2.50, Students — $2.00. ON SALEMonday at Mandel Hall.STROBE CANDLES only at Sticks & Stones,Harper Court.Can AMERIKA be salvaged? Tune in tonight.TAhSAM-YMrfCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO* PM.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Order* To Take Out1318 EAST *3rd ST. MU 4-10*2HY>E PARKTHEATRE53riJLLELlNO 7 9071Starts Friday, May 3rdAdults Only - No One Under 18 Will Be Admitted“.‘THE FEMALE...Makes I, A WOMANLook Like MARYPOPPINS . Deity NwrtSEVENTY TIMES SEVENA Starkly Realistic Film For Adults Only This IS an ad for BLACKFRIARS.How come Tribune reporters never getbeaten up?On State Street. THAT GREAT STREET,I just wanna sayThey do things they don't do on Broadway.Anyone interested in Senior Seminar usingLiberal Artsl Reading, call 684-8480.FORMER - CATHOLIC GRAD STUDENTSFor PH D dissert, in soc psych., I mustintehview 50 grad students from Cath. col¬leges who now consider selves OUT ofChurch. Please call 864-9626.BIO MAJORS, Trip out to Rock River."AMERIKA - Oy! Will you like it"—RudnickI wish I were a KelHogg's Corn Flakeat the BANDERSNATCH.LOVE & LIFE — underground Cinema atthe BLUE GARGOYLE, Monday, 8 & 10.WOODWARD APPRECIATION DAY. Tues¬day. 5:30. Woodward Cafeteria.Thomas Ned Shutkin, You're Needed!CHRIS: Why did Lee confuse the rectumand the uterus?ED: He was thinking of Amy.In NUDE RESTAURANT, Taylor Mead playswith his organ.You can't beat the Deep South — Side fororiginal and beautiful music — Roscoe Mit¬chell."AND NOW, For Our First Question, Teams,which will be worth 20 points — How manyflies can't be wrong?!"AMERIKA for AMERIKANS — and U.C.students. May 3, 4. the GARBAGE men areh coming!Woodward Cafeteria, Tuesday at 5:30.APU TRILOGY, Part I, Friday & Saturday,8 P.M. at the BLUE GARGOYLE, 5655 S.University. 50c.BIO MAJORS. Rock River trip Sat., May11. Deliver $2.00 in person to G-B 403, pre¬ferably by May 3.536B COULTER: In the more primitive fam¬ilies, arguments are settled by vibtence;enlightened individuals verbalize and discuss.Your background is showing. — 536A.SZO KUMSITZ at Hillel. Barbeque in Back¬yard. Dancing. 5:00 p.m. Sunday."A Masterpiece" — Sartre.SUPER K shall prevail."Peddyrasty is one thing — hashish quiteanother."In what kind of restaurant are the waitressesand customers nude?Musical of the absurd or absurd musical?See for yourself — AMERIKA. May 3 & 4.Is love by its very nature a blindness?Will the 14 grad students in the Humanitieswho voted for Jeff Schnitzer, thereby elect¬ing him to represent 800 of their kind,please contact him to explain wby — JHS.Russian films at the Clark Theater thisSunday: "Quiet Flows the Don" (Sholokhov)and "Last Game," about Russian POW'swho play a soccer game against the Nazisin charge of them, knowing to expect re¬prisals if they win. Sponsored by U-HighRussian Club.Godard's BREATHLESS with Belmondo, Sat¬urday night in Cobb; 7:15 & 9:15. If any venomFlying from the eastOr any from the southOr any from the northOr any from the westCome nigh.Over the world of men.I alone knowThe running streamsAnd the nine serpentsNow behold.All weeds must nowFail among herbs,Seas must desolve,All salt water.When I this venomFrom thee blow.—from the LacnungaTHE GREAT LIBERAL UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO— Communists, Athiests, etc. —Where are your "radical" courses in BlackHistory, Black Civilization,, and Black Art?Unless you happen to be (sic) a graduatestudent, is there any place where you can"learn" about African history, people, art,and music?We've got Far Eastern Art and Chinese Civ.and Indian Civ. and what is the proportion ofthese people to the number of people in theU.S. whose ancestors were from Africa?From a Sun Times Editorial—"Birdwatchershave been startled out of their binoculars bythe sudden appearance of a Great PuffingSneakerwearer."As they say in Spain, left is the side ofthe heart, right that of the liver.The Joseph Jarman/Buddy Guy/ John Colt-rane/Ray Charles/Eric Dolphy/Ornette Cole¬man/Salvador Dali FAN CLUB will meetSunday, May 5, from 10 P.M. to Midnightin the Quantrell Auditoium.MORE CLASSIFIEDS ON PAGE 12Give yourcontact lensesa bathIn order to keep your contact lenses ascomfortable and convenient as they weremeant to be, you have to take care ofthem. But until now you needed two ormore separate solutions to properlyprepare and maintain your contacts. Notwith Lensine. Lensine is the one lenssolution for complete contact lens care.Cleaning your contacts with Lensineretards the buildup of foreign deposits onthe lenses. And soaking your contacts inLensine overnight assures you of properlens hygiene. You get a free soaking caseon the bottom of every bottle of Lensine.It has been demonstrated that improperstorage between wearings may result inthe growth of bacteria on the lenses.This is a sure cause of eye irritation andin some cases can endanger your vision.Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which issterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.Just a drop or two of Lensine, before youinsert your lens, coats and lubricates itallowing the lens to float more freely inthe eye's fluids. That's becauseLensine is an "isotonic" solution,which means that it blends withthe natural fluids of the eye.Let your contacts be theconvenience they weremeant to be. Getsome Lensine, from theMurine Company, Inc.May 3, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11* -iWould You Believe Still More Ads?An Emotional Experience —Weekends at the BANDERSNATCH.MR. B.: GIVE SHELLY THE THOU!Karl Rossman—hero or schmuck?See AMERIKA and find oof.And here's to you, Mrs. Robinson,Jesus loves you more than you will know(Whoa, Whoa, Whoa)LECTURE: Rabbi David S. Shapiro (Dept,of Hebrew Studies, University of Wisconsin,Milwaukee), "The Problem War in theJewish Tradition,"' At Hillel House. Friday,May 3, 8:30 p.m.Earn FREE TICKETS to The May 16thRhythm and Blues Festival: work in theFolklore Society Office and/or ticket booth.Call ENID at 667-65551 for details.BLUE GARGOYLE: Monday nights—theBEST in avant-grade cinema.Breathes there a Man with Soul so DeadWho Never to himself hath said—"I dig Roscoe Mitchell!""BEING EARNEST" is important, but seeAMERIKA first!FOREIGN CAR HOSPITAL is here to serv¬ice your little car or sell you one. Call forAppointment, Ml 3-3113.BLUE GARGOYLE: APU TRILOGY, RAVISHANKAR, Friday & Saturday, 8 p.m. —Don't fell your mommy.—Write a story for your little brother or—Fly an Aluminum Kite over the radarscreens at the Point.—Stop eating Kraft Macaroni & CheeseDinners.—Send a card to LBJ telling him to smokepot, 10,000 Gl's can't be wrong.—Get busted outside Rockefeller and bangon the doors screaming "Sanctuary, Sanc¬tuary!"—Do the same at the house west of Rocke¬feller.—Make an appointment with the FOREIGNCAR HOSPITAL for your sick foreign car.—Make it with your Humanities instructor'swife.—Make it with your Humanities Instructor'shusband?—Dog?—Ostrich?—Check out L.D.'s sign over Ahmad's. Thengo in and eat fine PERSIAN DELICACIES(57th near Blackstone).—Climb Starved Rock.—See the first 4 minutes of the Bob DylanFlick and the last 4 of THE GRADUATE.—Come out of that jive bag and stop using■words like hip, cool, soul and jive. Remem¬ber your background . . .—BLOW YOURSELF UP.—Whisper.—Fix a hole.—Swim at the LeMont Quarries, LeMont,Illinois.—Become a tone poem.—Burn your I.D. cvard—Meditate on ESCAPES.—Sit at the Point and count the secondsfrom 12 PM to S PM that you are unableto see the Man.—Burn votive candles.—Light your Fire (lock your door first).—Memorize the Congo. Recite it (with drumaccompaniment) when your favorite red-haired Hum teacher is least expecting it.—Become a regular at Valois.—Play Hyde Park's oldest game—Hippierthan Thou.—Plus don't.—Order a bushelbasket of fresh gold sandfrom a Lumber Yard.—Ask the next cop you see how manynotches he'll add this summer.—Put EVERYONE on YOUR Trip—in theMaroon Classified Ads.—Listen to Harry Bouras on Friday night.—Buy me a BMW.—Run on the dirt hills near 53rd and the I.C.—Observe the first 5 rows at the CLARK.—Find out why Mr. Kessler looks so youngand slim and handsome.—Play back the tape.—Learn why the Hyde Park Co-op neveredvertises in the Maroon (10,000 studentsMUST be wrong). Yet another facet ofHyde Park Liberalism.—Get some EXPERIENCE.—Surround yourself with BLACK ART—at theLAKESIDE GALLERY, East 55th Streetaround Cornell.—Study in the Himalayas. Write SpecialTours, Inc., 6 No. Michigan Avenue, Chicago60602.—Be a Montessori Teacher, r start your ownMETHOD.DOW SHALT NOT KILL ! ! ! I Ixerox^yoTmlnd.6"* C°'°Pthe caravan to Midland, Michigan, _Have your ow„ Guro_Yogi Srj NerodeAnnual Dow Stockholders Meeting. For info: RoomC Chndren'VHncn-tai^at^n ir1'”'0 Wa,,in9Call Chris Me Candless Days: 427-2533 after ! S P 3 B,llm9s-11 p.m., 624-4904.• CLERGY 8. LAYMEN CONCERNED •Writer's Workshop (PL 2-8377).A BREATHLESS SATURDAY to you.RHYTHM AND BLUES—May 16—Tickets onsale Monday.The Star and the AMA—a PRACTICAL manmight confuse the uterus (vagina) andthe rectum; a ROMANTIC woman mightconfuse the perineum with the area aroundthe hear. Don't be so critical.—SUPERDE¬FENDER.Earn Free Tickets to the RHYTHM 8.BLUES FESTIVAL. Call Enid at 667-6551.For details.Thanks to the med students who helped girlin restaurant lobby last Saturday.Give us your tired, your poor, your huddledmasses yearning to breath free—we sell tick¬ets to anyone. BLACKFRIARS.Barbeque 8, Fallafel at HILLEL. Sunday(May 5), 5:00 p.m. 75c.Witness Police Brutality. Come to theMARCH Saturday 11:30 at I IT.What does Grayson Kirk do that Ed Levidoesn't do—RALLY. SUPPORT ColumbiaStudents 12:30, Hutch Quad. Today.ONCE MORE TWICE: Fri., Sat., 10:30 p.m."In the Service of the Ego" and The LakeCountry String Band, Harper Theater CoffeeHouse. 5238 S. Harper, BU 8-1717.JoinDemonstrate/ P rotestRECOMMENDATIONNo shellyfish, he!A sackcess see.Dean B, Dean B!A prize him now?A G is enow.Give Shelly the Thou!Our rhet ain't fictDon't kwantrelldictNo joshing, nickt.SAN FRANCISCORoscoe Mitchell is going to San Francisco.Help send him off with lots of good vibesto repay him for all he's given us. FarewellConcert. This Sunday night, May 5, 10 pm.to Midnight, Quantrell Auditorium, 58th 7Ellis.SALEM!CASH 8. CARRY CLEARANCE SALE!!12 Dining Room Tableis at Vi Price. AtScandinavian Imports, 53rd and Lake Park.Perfect for Mother's Day!!!—Buy a copy of Siddharttia, get very high,and spend the afternoon in the PerennialGardens, somewhere near Stony Island andthe Midway.—Don't see THE FOX . . . 10,000 insertscan be wrong.—Try to remember the first time and thelast.—Open up the Pearly Gates.—Find out (without asking) what the ownersof Lesly Imports, Hyde Park Auto Service,and Foreign Car Hospital have in common.$5.00 Reward—Room 304 INH—For the firstcorrect answer. Meanwhile, check out thenew cars and have your old one fixed forthe long hot summer.—Bring presents to the gentlemen who workat the Chicago Beach Service Station.—Make your own expresso coffee (ACCENTat 53rd and Blackstone).—issue an FBI alert.—Stare at everyone's nose.—Forget but don't forgivd.—Ask the security guard for some Identifica¬tion. Plead self-defense.—Whistle while someone else works. —SLOW.—Eat your lunch with the workmen on EllisAvenue.—Explore the 67th Street Beach Or swim toit from the Point.—Become a streetworker and find out what'sreally happening in Woodlawn.—Forget about your past.—Send for the free Rudolph Steiner Book“The Lonely Generation and The SearchFor Truth," 211 Madison Avenue, New York,N.Y. 10016.—Stop complaining about how shitty theMsroon is and do something—send newideas, take groovy photos of people orevents, write a Gadfly on how shitty theMaroon is, resurrect the Other, joint thestaff, even for a week . . .—Get a tiny pipe at the KOGA GIFTSHOP (53rd near Harper), fill It, dis¬appear . . .—Or, take acid and dig POPE PAUL at theROYAL LONDON WAX WORKS Old Town.—Or, take acid and call GOD-1786.—Get it framed at the WALLER GALLERY,53rd and Blackstone.—Don't miss DIANA'S, 310 S. Hatsted . . .while you're eating there's a chance they'llexceilent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2012 E. 71st ST. drag a fresh lamb carcass across the floor.Also—GREEK SPOKEN.—Find ane African P.obe at THOMAS IM¬PORTS, middle 53rd Street.—Get all Underground Papers plus maga¬zines, posters and books (esp. poetry, drama,and fiction) at THE BOOK CENTER inHarper Court. For cards and UndergroundBooks, try the BOOK NOOK in the Co-opShopping Center.—Buy a bike at ART'S CYCLE SHOP andride to 71st Street, Get some wine andcheese at the PARTY MART and ride backalong the Lake.—Or get a super-racer at the TURIN BIKECO-OP and ride back. Stop at the StephenDouglas Memorial, around 31st and LakeShore Drive.—Know someone who lives at 6900 S.CRANDON and catch the view from theupper floors around sunset.—Locate the CAL-SAG CANAL.—Groove on something under something else.—Eat at KYROS (63rd and University)where the Woodlawn Power Structure resides.—Eat at Hutch Commons. Honest.—Wonder why every issue of the Maroondoesn't look like THE GREY CITY.—Make a stag movie.—Order French Toast at the LITTLE CORP¬ORAL.—Be Regal with Eagle.—Don't stand at the door and say "is THISthe Maroon Business Staff!"—FOR REAL SOUL FOOD—the kind yourmother NEVER m.de—go to GLADY'S (43rd& Indiana) or VERNOLA'S, but go with aBrother or wait for a very cold day.—Go to the BAROQUE (53rd between Harper& Lake Park)—Thursday nights—Joseph Jarman's BassPlayer may be featured.—Spearhead a movement to get everyone toroll their own cigarettes (machines arecheap at the UP/OOWN SHOP in OLDTOWN)—the cops can't arrest us all.—Chicago wouldn't be here if it wasn't forDU SABLE; find a statue of him . . . MUHAMMED SPEAKS.—Learn the Karate-Bugaloo—7 P.M. Mondayand Wednesday, U.C. Karate Club.—Visit the Children's Museum in the base¬ment of the Art Institute.—And borrow your parent's membership cardthen sit in the Member's Room with somefriends.—Rob Roy.—Join the MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.Now $12.50 instead of $20 . . . See ad onMay 30th.—Ask DOC FILMS to run "Spin and Marty."—Crash out.—Find out if any of the U.C. Fraternitiesstill have "race" clauses.—Join the RUGBY CLUB, especialy if you'rea girl.—Ask G. Davis to get you a RUGBY shirt.—Find out if EVELYN WOOD really works.—Touch and buy the PEUGEOTS at LeslyImports, 2235 S. Michigan.—Get burlap at FABYAR, 5225 S. Harper.—Get a water pipe at Noferte Jewelers orSticks and Slones for all that dynamite wateryou just bought.—Rent a car and get the hell out.—Have your stereo checked at AMERICANRADIO AND TV, 1300 E. 53rd.—2001.—Survive the desperate hours.—Get a Mother's Day Present at ACCENT1437 E. 53rd or SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS,53rd and Lake Park.—RING.—Visit the PONTIAC INDIAN on mid-47thI Street.! —Retire to the roof of the PLANETARIUMon a windy day.—Get a Natural or a Natural Wig.—Buy a statue at ACASA, Harper Court.—Check out the T.W.O. CONVENTION, May3, in the Grand Ballroom, 65th 8, CottageGrove, round 8 p.m.—Discover Winesberg, Ohio.—Think of just ONE better way to escapeand send it to the Maroon Business Office,Room 304.-Be the second person in your crowd to ; _Fjnd the Lesser Kud(J at the Lincoln Parksheve all your hair off.—Cook hot dogs and sauer kraut in anydorm. Zoo.—You have 3 minutes—What are the namesof the 3 pyramids of Egypt, of the "fisher¬men three," of the last three books of theOld Testament, and the three signs of theZodiac with which your sign is compatible.— I urn out your light,Close your door, andCrawl into your sleeping bag.—Sniff Mt.ce.—Transcend Reality.—Throw eggs at the statue of Columbia.—Legolize Insanity.—Stare Back.—Wear fine clothes with a MOUSETRAPLabel.—Go to MITCHELL'S ICE CREAM PARLORon 71st Street (they've got homemade icecream and hot fudge to go).—When asked for your I.D., show yourBillings Clinic Card and say you left yourID card in your white coat on the thirdfloor. Scream!—Gnaw on Bonomo's Turkish Taffy.—Ask your Phy Sci Teacher if he reallybelieves all that bullshit.—Ask him about Velikovsky's WORLDS INCOLLISION.—Have your portrait done by Ivan Albright.—See and hear Judy Roberts and Don Ben¬nett at the BAROQUE (53rd Street). Request "Soul Man."—Pick yourself off the sidewalk.—Start a Victory Garden.—Sell the Maroon inside old copies of —Faint in the Ladie's Room on the 2ndfloor of the SHORELAND.—REREAD THE First Escapes in the April5 MAROON.—FUCK THE DRAFT.—Ask Grandfeathers to re-open the OASIS.—Get well at the Fultonia Health FoodCenter, 63rd street.—Get something ALIVE! at the AnimalWelfare League Shelter, 62nd & Wabash.—Walk above the ceiling in the Social ScienceReading Room.—Order "Soul Ribs'' from CAESAR COLLINSBARBEQUE.—See the Aubrey Beardsley pillow cases atCOOLEY'S CANDLES.—Check out the little foxes coming out ofthe Lab School between 2:30 and 3:30.—Go to SMOKY JOE'S, Halsted near Max¬well Street near Rosevelt Road for yournew summer outfit, especially if you planto be south of 60th Street or north of 47th.—Relax on the balcony of the Classics Read¬ing Room.—Stash it in a Safe Deposit Box:UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 E. 55th Street. —Visit Don Foxx Millinery Supply,Lake Street near Dearborn.—See the White Folks flee the Mighty BlackHordes this summer, north of the Midwaystarring the famous Hyde Park LiberalEstablishment.—Check out the artifacts from "The Villageof the Dead" at the Harper Gallery.—Get a fine Peruvian blanket at STICKS &STONES.-Find out if the ELECTRIC THEATRE isany good and let us know.—Ride around Washington Park (during theday, man) and dig the QUIET, the massiveswimming pool, and an occasional pack ofdogs.—Sunbathe on the roof of the BlackstoneDorm and read all the Great Books.—Eat a huge bowl of Sicilian Land Snailsat Mama Luca's (Sedgwick and North) (orunder $2.—Buy a bottle of Egri Bikaver HungarianWine. Only $2, but incredible! PARTYMART.—Visit the FOUR HEADS in Evanston.—Stop eating 'em.—Have contests for distance using Playtax'snew invention.—Ask Mr. Kennessey (Party Mart) aboutwines .. . anything!—Yip Off.—Jam at 60th Place.—Wish BIG JOHN'S back into existence.—Sit in the shade of any of the striking"yellow bushes" in Hyde Park.—Or the lilacs somewhere on 58th Street.Due to a printer s error, the follow¬ing names were omitted from theend of the petition for a respons¬ible University, printed in Tues¬day's Maroon. They form a list ofpeople to whom the petition wassubmitted.George W. Beadle. PresidentWayne C. Booth. Dean of the Col¬lege Fairfax M. Cone Chairmanof the Board of Trustees CharlesMichael J. Dealny, Chief of Uni¬versity Security Dan Landt, Dir¬ector of Student Activities Gil¬bert Lee Vice President for Business and Finance Edward H. LeviProvost and President-DesignateDonald N. Lev me. Master of theSocial Sciences Collegiate Divis¬ion Eugene L. Miller. BusinessManager for Campus operationsCharles D. O'Connell. Dean ofStudents Anthony T.G. Pallet!Director of College AdrtxssionsStuart M. Tave, Master of the Hu¬manities Collegiate Division Ed¬ward Turkington, Director of Stu¬dent Housing^SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200DISCOUNTART MATERIALSOffice SuppliesSchool SuppliesPicture FramesDUNCAN’S•1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/c!o*sed SundaysParty facilities to 400&auer'* Dependable Serviceon /our Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393An earnest discussionof Earnestfollowing the play inThe Hutch GalleryFri. night - Mark Rosen andcast membersto be taped by WHPKFOTAs StfrtsJ®JFREE TICKETSAvailable at ReynoldsDesk for students and 3Club ,faculty. IF THERE BE FAULTPLACE IT ON THYSELFAND PLACE THYSELFWITHIN REACH OF ITSCORRECTION12 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 3, 1968